Neurosurgery
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Case Reports
The effect of arteriovenous malformation resection on cerebrovascular reactivity to carbon dioxide.
To investigate the cerebral hemodynamic changes associated with obliteration of arteriovenous malformations (AVMs), we studied 26 patients undergoing total microsurgical AVM resection during isoflurane and N2/O2 anesthesia. Detectors were placed 5 to 6 cm from the margin of the lesion and in a homologous contralateral position. Cerebral blood flow (CBF) was measured using the intravenous xenon-133 technique before and after AVM resection, during both hypocapnia and normocapnia at each stage. ⋯ One patient suffered postoperative intracerebral hemorrhage, attributable to technical problems, and had no increase in CBF. We conclude that, with an acute increase in the arteriovenous pressure gradient (and cerebral perfusion pressure) that results from shunt obliteration, there is an immediate global effect of AVM resection to increase CBF. Cerebrovascular reactivity to CO2 remains intact both before and after excision.
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Case Reports
Acute spinal intradural extramedullary hematoma: a nonsurgical approach for spinal cord decompression.
The authors present the case of a 60-year old man with a spontaneous spinal intradural hematoma in the thoracic and lumbar region, which was caused by anticoagulant therapy and led to a severe progressive transverse lesion. After substitution of coagulation factors, a small catheter was inserted into the subarachnoid space via a lumbar puncture. By alternating irrigation and suction removal of the blood clot, restoration of the cerebrospinal fluid passage was possible along with a marked improvement in the neurological deficits. At 8 months' follow-up, the patient had completely recovered from the severe paraparesis and bladder dysfunction.
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Case Reports
An extreme lateral approach to intradural lesions of the cervical spine and foramen magnum.
Meningiomas and neurofibromas are the most common intradural extramedullary tumors of the foramen magnum and cervical spine. Many of these tumors are located ventral or ventrolateral to the spinal cord and medulla. Posterior approaches, although adequate for the management of most of these tumors, can sometimes result in incomplete removal of the tumor and exacerbation of the neurological deficits. ⋯ The entire longitudinal and lateral extent of the tumor and also its extradural extension can be can be managed by this approach. This approach can be considered in such a group of patients harboring entirely ventral or recurrent tumors for which the conventional posterior approach has failed. Six patients who underwent this procedure are described to illustrate its application.
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The cerebrovascular response to CO2 was evaluated by measuring relative changes in blood flow velocity within the middle cerebral artery by transcranial Doppler ultrasonography during normo-, hypo-, and hypercapnia. In seven patients without subarachnoid hemorrhage (five with unruptured arteriovenous malformations and two with aneurysms), the CO2 vasoreactivity was tested on the side of the middle cerebral artery with normal flow velocities opposite the lesion. A baseline CO2 reactivity test was obtained in each patient and then repeated under constant intravenous infusion of nimodipine, 2 mg/hr. ⋯ Two months later, after full recovery from the subarachnoid hemorrhage and normalization of the velocities, a third measurement of CO2 reactivity was obtained as a baseline control. No significant effect of nimodipine on CO2 vasoreactivity could be demonstrated in any of the test periods. In the second week after a subarachnoid hemorrhage, a significant reduction of the cerebrovascular response to CO2 was found (P less than 0.005).