Pediatric neurosurgery
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Pediatric neurosurgery · Feb 2003
The role of surgical placement and pump orientation in intrathecal pump system failure: a technical report.
Intrathecal pump catheter complications are the most common cause of failure in drug delivery. A previous report has documented that intra-abdominal positioning of the intrathecal pump may predispose the pump-catheter neck to premature catheter breakdown and leakage. ⋯ We found three specific cases where a 'fulcrum effect' occurred due to intra-abdominal positioning of the pump predisposing the catheter to breakdown. This study demonstrates that intra-abdominal placement of the pump can predispose the catheter to failure/breakdown and that surgeons should attempt to place the pump catheter neck in a superiomedial position, distant from any bony prominences, to prevent the 'fulcrum effect' on the pump-catheter neck junction and reducing the likelihood of either internal or external compressive forces.
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Pediatric neurosurgery · Jan 2003
Complications of invasive monitoring used in intractable pediatric epilepsy.
Invasive monitoring for intractable epilepsy is useful when the epileptogenic focus is in question even after an extensive noninvasive presurgical evaluation, or when the epileptogenic focus is located in or near eloquent cortex. From June 1989 to June 2001 at the Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, 64 children with intractable epilepsy underwent 67 invasive monitoring procedures as part of their presurgical evaluation. The average age at implantation was 10 years. ⋯ One patient did have a transient visual field loss after placement of an occipital grid. While CSF leaks are common after invasive monitoring despite precautions, clinically significant CSF infections are uncommon and appear to be unrelated to the duration of monitoring, the occurrence of a CSF leak or the length of time the patient is on perioperative antibiotics. We conclude that invasive monitoring for intractable epilepsy is generally safe.