British journal of neurosurgery
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Analysis of slow waves in arterial blood pressure (ABP) and intracranial pressure (ICP) has been used as an index to describe cerebrovascular pressure-reactivity. It has been previously demonstrated that the pressure-reactivity index (PRx) can be used to reflect global cerebrovascular reactivity with changes in ABP. A positive PRx signifies a positive association between ABP and ICP, indicating a non-reactive vascular bed, while a negative PRx is reflective of intact cerebral autoregulation, where ABP waves provoke inversely correlated waves in ICP. ⋯ In contrast, the mean PRx in patients that were not decompressed did not change significantly with time (p = 0.357). Surgery in acute brain injury for which the bone flap is left out in anticipation of raised intracranial pressure in the postoperative period leads to an improved PRx as compared with controls. Craniectomy in this situation may have a contribution to the restoration of disturbed cerebrovascular pressure-reactivity.
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Case Reports
Emergency placement of a self-expandable covered stent for carotid artery injury during trans-sphenoidal surgery.
A patient sustained internal carotid artery (ICA) injury during trans-sphenoidal surgery. Bleeding from the resultant pseudo-aneurysm was not fully controlled by surgical packing. Emergency endovascular deployment over the injured ICA segment of a self-expandable covered-stent ('Symbiot' stent), initially designed for use in coronary saphenous vein-graft, was successful in securing haemostasis.
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Comparative Study
Neurosurgical trainees operative experience before and after introduction of the New Deal for junior doctors.
To compare operative experience before and after implementation of the New Deal to reduce junior doctors working hours, operative data was audited over a 6-month period. The three registrars with national training numbers in our unit were placed on two virtual working patterns to determine what their operative experience would have been over that 6-month period. Comparison with a 1980s trainee over a similar period was also made. ⋯ Trainees are unavailable for elective training on night shift and then for a compensatory period afterwards, doubling the time spent away from formal surgical training. Indiscriminate reduction in working hours by enforced absence for compensatory rest has a potentially deleterious impact on elective training. By reducing the out of hours commitment trainees have a reduced, but possibly acceptable, exposure to emergency neurosurgery without impact on elective training.
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The authors report two cases of spontaneous intracranial haemorrhage after elective craniotomy for resection of cerebral tumour. Both patients had mechanical aortic valve prostheses and were on regular warfarin therapy. ⋯ Both patients were re-anticoagulated with subcutaneous low molecular weight heparin within the first week postcraniotomy-both developed life-threatening intracranial haemorrhage requiring urgent evacuation. The authors emphasize the risk of re-anticoagulation without postoperative imaging and the disadvantages of therapeutic dose, low molecular weight heparin in the postoperative period.
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Case Reports
Sciatic schwannoma spanning the sciatic notch: removal by an anterior, transabdominal approach.
We describe a sciatic schwannoma spanning the sciatic notch in a 39-year-old woman with persistent pelvic pain after caesarean delivery. The tumour was detected by pelvic CT scan and MRI. Anterior transabdominal surgery allowed the en bloc removal of both the pelvic and the buttock component of the tumour.