Neurosurgical review
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Neurosurgical review · Jan 1993
Outcome of patients with aneurysmal and presumed aneurysmal bleeding. A hospital study based on 100 consecutive cases in a neurological clinic.
One hundred patients with spontaneous subarachnoid hemorrhage due to aneurysm or presumed aneurysm consecutively admitted to a neurological clinic and subjected to CCT during the first 72 hours were examined retrospectively. The outcome after two months as defined by the Glasgow Outcome Scale (GOS) was relatively good: 23% of the patients suffered management mortality (GOS I) (postoperative lethality 8%), 3% showed GOS-Grade II, 14% grade III, 17% grade IV, and 43% grade V. The extent of intracranial hemorrhage correlated well with the initial Hunt-Hess Grade which, in turn, had a strong influence on case fatality and the degree of disability. ⋯ DCI occurred in 60% of patients with marked hydrocephalus. Rebleeding was more frequent in patients with acute hydrocephalus. Hydrocephalus, DCI, and rebleeding were associated with a poorer initial grade on the Hunt and Hess Scale.
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Percutaneous endoscopic lumbar discectomy (PELD) is a new technique for the decompression of the lumbar disc space and removal of nucleus pulposus via a posterolateral approach. The technique was introduced in Germany by the authors in April 1987. The method is indicated in patients with nonsequestrated lumbar disc herniation with an intact dorsal longitudinal ligament. ⋯ The relief of symptoms as judged by the patients was between 70-100 percent in the majority of the cases. Three patients had to be reoperated at the same level and site, because of either persistent or recurrent sciatica. The performance in local anesthesia, the atraumatic extraspinal approach, the reduced time of hospitalization and postoperative morbidity as well as the reduced time of work incapability are the main advantages of this new method.
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Neurosurgical review · Jan 1993
Somato-sensory evoked potentials in root lesions and stenosis of the spinal canal (their diagnostic significance in clinical decision making).
The aim of the present study was to determine the significance of different SEP techniques and parameters in clinical evaluation of cases of lumbar and cervical root lesions and stenosis of the spinal canal. Using a qualitative rating scale, 92 cases were analyzed retrospectively whose primary diagnosis was questioned because of conflicting data from clinical, neuroradiological and neurophysiological testing. ⋯ Except for the time-consuming method of segmental stimulation, the demonstration of the functional deficit itself by SEP techniques in general was frequently disappointing. The contribution of the different SEP parameters to clinical decision making and the clinical consequences are briefly discussed.