Neurosurgery
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The authors report their experience with 25 patients (mean age, 44.3 +/- 12.1 years) with an intracerebral hematoma (ICH) from a ruptured aneurysm who were emergently operated on without angiography. Instead, preoperative high-resolution infusion computed tomography (CT) scans were used to identify the aneurysm causing the hemorrhage. In all patients, the preoperative Glasgow Coma Scale score was < 5 and brain stem compression was evident. ⋯ Twelve patients survived, eight of whom were only moderately disabled and were independent at 6-months' follow-up. Of the 13 patients who died, all except one died within 4 days of admission. The authors conclude that although angiographic verification before aneurysm surgery is preferable, in the moribund patient with intracerebral hemorrhage, infusion CT scanning provides sufficient information concerning vascular anatomy to allow rational emergency craniotomy and aneurysm clipping.
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The pathophysiological mechanisms to explain peritumoral edema have not been clarified. Multiple aspects of brain edema secondary to supratentorial meningiomas were prospectively investigated in a group of 29 patients who underwent surgery consecutively. Sixty-nine tumor samples were analyzed for prostanoid levels. ⋯ Otherwise, histology, pathological features of tumor aggressiveness, or mechanical parameters, such as its volume, location, and insertion site, did not correlate well with edema parameters or with prostaglandin levels. Similarly, tumor water content, imaging parameters in computed tomography and magnetic resonance, and operative findings (including dissection plane, vascularity, and tumor firmness) did not correlate well with edema parameters. Although a direct cause-effect relationship between prostaglandins and peritumoral edema is not conclusively established, the circumstantial evidence of the ability of prostaglandins to induce vasogenic brain edema and the robust association with peritumoral edema is persuasive.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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A rare case of hydatid disease of the lumbar extradural area and of the paravertebral muscles is reported. The patient underwent surgery, resulting in complete recovery. The limitations of computed tomography and the benefits of magnetic resonance imaging in forming a diagnosis are discussed. Magnetic resonance has been found to be an invaluable tool, not only in detecting the soft tissue extent of the disease but also in delineating the viability of hydatid cysts.
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Rapid presurgical neuromagnetic localization of the somatosensory cortex was performed successfully on five patients with a large-array biomagnetometer by a protocol called magnetic source imaging (MSI). Determination of the location of the central sulcus is important in assessing operative risk and determining the optimal operative approach to structural lesions in the vicinity of the motor strip. The use of magnetic resonance imaging anatomical methods and intraoperative visual identification can be imprecise, whereas invasive localization prolongs operative time, adds cost, and entails added risk. ⋯ In this study, the validity of MSI localizations was confirmed intraoperatively by direct cortical recording of somatosensory evoked potentials and/or direct motor stimulation. Complete agreement was found between MSI and intraoperative mapping in locating the central sulcus. Objective confirmations considered together with the speed and reliability of the procedure and with the presurgical availability of the results suggests the potential utility of MSI for routine surgical planning.
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Comparative Study
The distribution of medication along the spinal canal after chronic intrathecal administration.
Chronic intrathecal drug infusion for the treatment of neurological diseases, such as spasticity and chronic pain, has become an accepted method of therapy in recent years. Concurrent pharmacokinetic studies have shown that the cisternal cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) drug level is considerably lower than the lumbar CSF level during continuous infusion into the lumbar subarachnoid space. One factor that makes analysis of this decline in drug level difficult to quantify is that it is only feasible to sample CSF at the two extremes of the spinal subarachnoid space. ⋯ Over a 20-cm distance of the thoracic cord, radionuclide counts decreased gradually so that the indium-111 diethylenetriamine pentaacetic acid concentration surrounding the cord at the T2 vertebral level was 43% of that at the T12 level in four patients. Therefore, it appears that even with a hydrophilic compound, which minimizes spinal cord capillary losses, there is still a considerable reduction of CSF drug concentration along the spinal canal. The clinical implication of this gradual decline in drug level is that for intrathecal infusion of relatively hydrophilic compounds there may not be any advantage in placing the catheter tip at more rostral locations, such as at the midthoracic or cervical cord.