Surg Neurol
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Review Case Reports
Intrathecal granuloma after implantation of a morphine pump: case report and review of the literature.
Intrathecal morphine pumps are being increasingly used in patients with benign pain who have a longer life expectancy than cancer patients. Newer complications may be encountered. ⋯ Long-term use of implantable pumps may carry increased risks that are not observed during the short-term experience of cancer patients. Reimaging is important in evaluating patients who have developed uncontrollable pain and new neurologic findings.
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Isolated thrombosis of the deep cerebral venous system is very rare and is associated with a poor prognosis. Antithrombin III (AT III) deficiency is a disorder of hypercoagulability associated with deep venous thrombosis and recurrent pulmonary emboli. We report a case of an 18-year-old man who presented with spontaneous thrombosis of the deep cerebral veins and straight dural sinus as the initial presentation of a previously undiagnosed AT III deficiency. ⋯ Direct endovascular thrombolysis is a potentially effective management strategy for isolated thrombosis of the deep cerebral venous system.
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The common occurrence of chronic subdural hematoma (CSDH) in older patients raises some diagnostic and therapeutic difficulties. Despite general agreement about the indication of operation, the extent of surgery is still discussed controversially. We have, therefore, reviewed operative findings and outcome in 104 patients with CSDH. ⋯ The clinical data of the present study suggest that burr hole craniostomy with closed-system drainage should be the method of choice for the initial treatment of CSDH, even in cases with preoperative detection of neomembranes. Craniotomy should be carried out only in patients with reaccumulating hematoma or residual hematoma membranes, which prevent reexpansion of the brain.
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In human hydrosyringomyelia and in the late stage of experimental syringomyelia, the spinal cord tissue adjacent to the syrinx is exposed to a similar pathophysiologic condition. We investigated the ultrastructural changes in the late stages of kaolin-induced syringomyelia, and in addition, we presented magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) findings of the cervicomedullary junction and syrinx, and the nature of edema in the spinal cord of this experimental model. ⋯ The MRI confirmed the communication between the fourth ventricle and the syrinx. The ultrastructural changes were almost identical to those of the early stage syrinx, but the astrocytic proliferation was more severe, and the edema was less in the late stage. The perisyrinx edema appeared to be of the interstitial type, as in hydrocephalus. Axonal degeneration and demyelination continued with abortive attempt at regeneration and remyelination in the less edematous late stage, which might be the cellular basis for the persistence or worsening of clinical symptoms and signs in the chronic stage of syringomyelia even after surgical treatment.
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The management of head-injured patients admitted to emergency departments is not standardized. ⋯ The present protocol stresses the importance of the patient's clinical and anamnestic evaluation upon arrival in the Emergency Department, especially in minor head injuries.