Neurosurgical review
-
Neurosurgical review · Mar 2000
ReviewCentral nervous system hemangioblastomas, endolymphatic sac tumors, and von Hippel-Lindau disease.
Von Hippel-Lindau disease (VHL) is a hereditary cancer syndrome caused by germline mutations of the VHL tumor suppressor gene. Major progress has been made in the last decade in both clinical and fundamental aspects of VHL. The VHL gene product, pVHL, has major and multiple functions: pVHL regulates not only first angiogenesis but also extracellular matrix formation and the cell cycle. ⋯ Treatment of symptomatic hemangioblastomas remains mainly neurosurgical, often in emergency, but stereotactic radiosurgery is emerging as an alternative therapeutic procedure. In the future, antiangiogenic drugs could represent a potential medical treatment of CNS hemangioblastomas in view of their highly vascular structure. Lastly, visceral manifestations of VHL disease are also of critical importance and require early detection for effective treatment.
-
Neurosurgical review · Mar 2000
Clinical TrialTranscranial Doppler sonography in adult hydrocephalic patients.
Transcranial Doppler sonography (TCD) is a noninvasive technique for measurement of cerebral blood flow velocity (CBFV) in the major arteries of the circle of Willis. Dynamic changes in the pulsatility index (PI) and the resistance index (RI), as calculated from TCD data, allow for an assessment of the forces acting on the terminal vasculature of the brain. The present study was designed to investigate a possible relationship between TCD parameters and intracranial pressure (ICP) changes in adult patients with hypertensive hydrocephalus. ⋯ In a subgroup of hydrocephalic patients with a preshunting ICP value >35 mm Hg (n=6), the changes described above were more pronounced than in the subgroup with preshunting ICP values <35 mm Hg, which suggests an exponential degree of influence of ICP on TCD parameters. In conclusion, TCD may provide a tool for assessment of ICP in adult patients with occlusive hydrocephalus, although an exact noninvasive measurement of ICP by TCD seems impossible. Changes in the RI and PI indices appear to be useful indicators of elevated ICP.