Neurosurgery
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Superior semicircular canal dehiscence (SSCD) is an osseous defect of the arcuate eminence of the petrous temporal bone. Strategies for measuring dehiscence size are variable, and the usefulness of such parameters remains in clinical equipoise. ⋯ SSCD volumetry is a novel method of measuring dehiscence size that has excellent inter-rater reliability and is less variable compared to dehiscence length, but its potential as a predictor of symptom outcomes is not substantiated. However, the study is limited by low power.
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Chordomas are rare but challenging neoplasms involving the skull base. A preoperative grading system will be useful to identify both areas for treatment and risk factors, and correlate to the degree of resection, complications, and recurrence. ⋯ The proposed chordoma grading system can help surgeons to predict the difficulty of the case and know which areas of the skull base will need attention to plan further therapy.
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Relative residence time (RRT) is a marker of disturbed blood flow, marked by low magnitude and high oscillatory wall shear stress (WSS). The relation between solute residence time in proximity to the vascular endothelium and the atherosclerotic process is well appreciated in the literature. ⋯ Atherogenesis and atherosclerosis have long been thought to be a major inciting factor responsible for the formation of aneurysms in the cerebral vasculature. We propose that inception of side-wall aneurysms occurs in hemodynamic environments that promote an atheroprotective endothelial phenotype and that the atheroprotective phenotype is therefore aneurysmogenic.