Neurosurgery
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Case Reports
Evaluation and follow-up of carotid-cavernous fistulas by transcranial Doppler sonography: illustrative case.
The availability of transcranial Doppler sonography has resulted in an easy, noninvasive, reproducible, and highly reliable method for evaluating the flow characteristics of carotid-cavernous sinus fistulas. It also allows the follow-up of the effect of different interventional measures, specifically, embolization with detachable balloons. An illustrative case is reported, in which the findings of serial transcranial Doppler sonograms are correlated with findings on computed tomographic scans and angiograms. The impact of our findings on future approaches to the hemodynamic classification of these acquired vascular shunts is discussed.
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We evaluated four patients who had occult intrasacral meningocele with multimodality radiographic imaging techniques. The clinical features, radiological findings, gross appearances of the lesion at surgery, surgical technique, histopathological features of the cyst wall, and surgical outcome are described. The role of magnetic resonance imaging in the preoperative evaluation compared with standard radiographic techniques is discussed. Theories regarding the pathogenesis of this lesion are reviewed.
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Thirty-three cases of intracranial epidermoid tumors treated during the past 25 years were analyzed with regard to clinical manifestations, recurrence rates related to the extent of surgery, and long-term survival rates. Epidermoid tumors caused various symptoms, especially in the cerebellopontine angle (15 cases), of which a transient remission of symptoms was observed in 4 cases (23.5%). The average time from initial symptoms to surgery was much shorter in suprasellar region and third ventricular locations (average of 11 months) than in other locations (average of 7 years). ⋯ Among the 29 patients in a long-term follow-up survey, seven tumors recurred after an average interval of 8 years and 10 months (from the first to second operation) and 12 years and 6 months (from the second to third operation). Patients with recurrent tumors were successfully treated, and excellent functional prognosis was observed even after the second or third operation. The 20-year survival rate was 92.8% (Kaplan-Meier method).
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In order to investigate the clinical significance of redundant nerve roots of the cauda equina (RNR) and their pathogenesis, the following studies were performed: 1) examination of 1,256 myelograms of patients with lumbar disease; 2) clinical analysis of 55 patients with RNR and 75 without RNR; 3) electrophysiological examination of 9 patients with RNR; and 4) anatomical and histopathological examination of 6 autopsy cases. RNR were found in 42% of patients with severely constricted spinal canals. ⋯ The spatial distribution of redundant nerve roots and the extent of degeneration of nerve fibers in redundant nerve roots indicated the close causal relationship between RNR and constriction of the spinal canal. As the pathogenesis of RNR, the authors suggest a squeezing force from the constricted spinal canal acting on the nerve roots.
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Seventy-five patients older than 60 years of age underwent surgical resection of intracranial meningiomas during a 10-year period at a single institution. All patients had a computed tomographic scan preoperatively, and all were followed for at least 3 months postoperatively. There were 50 patients 61 to 70 years of age (Group A), and 25 patients older than 70 years (Group B). ⋯ Outcome at 3 months correlated significantly with low neurological grade preoperatively and with a tumor location over the cortical convexity. There was no significant correlation with age or tumor size. We conclude that resection of intracranial meningiomas is associated with significant morbidity and mortality in the elderly.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)