Neurosurgery
-
Twenty-six patients with blunt trauma of the cervical spine, producing a subluxation from a "locked" or "perched" facet, facet destruction with evidence of instability, or a fracture involving the foramen transversarium, underwent preoperative vertebral angiography to determine the incidence of vertebral artery injury. The cervical spine injury in all the patients was deemed unstable and in need of surgical stabilization. Spinal cord injury was present in one-half of the patients studied. ⋯ In none of the patients did the vertebral artery injury clearly result in neurological dysfunction or other sequelae. After cervical spine fracture or dislocation, vertebral artery injury is more prevalent than commonly believed. The possibility of vertebral artery injury should be considered during the establishment of clinical management schemes for blunt trauma of the cervical spine.
-
A number of questions remained unanswered by the empirical success of antimicrobial prophylaxis for neurosurgical patients at The Mount Sinai Hospital during a 15-year period. Vancomycin (1 g intravenously) and tobramycin (80 mg intramuscularly) were administered in the induction room. Streptomycin (50 mg) was mixed into each liter of saline used to irrigate the surgical incision. ⋯ Positive cultures of glove imprints were found in 29% of the operations, and the bacterial source was traced to four different surgeons in four operations (9%). The surgeons' gloves were also a source of potential pathogens (Staphylococcus aureus) in two instances, but the bacterial species were also recovered from cultures of the environment. Based on individual biotyping of bacteria and antibiotic susceptibility testing, no consistent source or pattern could be uncovered for the bacteria in the surgical wound or the operating room air.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
-
Percutaneous compression of the trigeminal ganglion, which is currently being used for the control of trigeminal neuralgia, induces marked intraoperative elevations of the systemic blood pressure and heart rate changes, which may increase the risk of cardiovascular complications. We have analyzed the characteristics of the arterial hypertensive response and the cardiac rhythm changes induced by percutaneous compression of the trigeminal ganglion in 42 consecutive, unselected patients undergoing operations for essential trigeminal neuralgia under three different regimens of anesthesia. The first 22 patients (Group 1) underwent operations under brief general anesthesia without endotracheal intubation. ⋯ By contrast, patients of Group 3, who had local anesthetic blockade of Meckel's cave before ganglion compression, did not develop tachycardia or extrasystoles. Foramen ovale puncture elicited marked elevations of the systemic blood pressure in all patients. Ganglion compression further increased blood pressure, except in patients of Group 3, who had local anesthetic blockade of Meckel's cave.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
-
The main objective of our study was to evolve a practical management protocol for neurosurgical patients with hyponatremia and natriuresis, based on their blood volume status and hematocrit. Twenty-one patients with hyponatremia and natriuresis and 3 control patients were studied. Patients with hyponatremia were categorized on the basis of their hematocrit, central venous pressure, and total blood volume. ⋯ We conclude that most neurosurgical patients with hyponatremia and natriuresis have hypovolemia, with or without anemia. Fluid and salt replacement and a blood transfusion rather than fluid restriction often results in the correction of the hyponatremia. Our findings offer indirect evidence to support the hypothesis that in most of these patients, hyponatremia is caused by cerebral salt wasting syndrome, rather than the syndrome of inappropriate secretion of antidiuretic hormone.
-
From 1978 to 1988, 314 patients with malignant astrocytoma were treated by our neuro-oncology team. Twenty-five patients were excluded from further analysis because of a lack of adequate follow-up, the brain-stem location of the tumor, or an age of less than 18 years. Of the 289 remaining patients in the valid study group, 213 had Grade IV tumors (73.7%) and 76 had Grade III tumors; 167 patients were male (57.8%) and 112 were female, and 89 were less than 40 years of age (30.8%). ⋯ Patients undergoing repeated surgery were more likely to be less than 40 years of age (x = 5.72; P < 0.02), but neither sex nor histological findings was associated with repeated surgery. For the series as a whole, the observed 5-year survival rate was 6%. We conclude that an aggressive multidisciplinary approach can produce sizable numbers of long-term survivors in malignant astrocytoma patients with favorable prognostic factors.