World Neurosurg
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Long-term results of sympathectomy in patients with complex regional pain syndrome (CRPS) type 2 varies widely among studies due to nonspecific or vague criteria of diagnosis and absence of outcome predictors that help good patient selection. The objective was to determine the predictors of long-term outcome of sympathectomy in patients with upper limb CRPS type 2. ⋯ Thoracic sympathectomy may prove more effective than reported in carefully selected CRPS patients with prominent sympathetic overactivity, no or early allodynia, and pain relief >2 days after SGB.
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Hemifacial spasm results from vascular compression of the facial nerve. It remains controversial whether severe compression and subsequent nerve indentation predict a good or a poor surgical outcome. Here, to illustrate the relationship between the degree of neurovascular compression and surgical outcome, we conducted a retrospective case-cohort study focused on patients whose facial nerve was seriously compressed. ⋯ Severe vascular compression and subsequent nerve indentation were correlated with a greater possibility of single compression and a lower incidence of multiple neurovascular conflicts in patients with hemifacial spasm, making the microvascular decompression procedure more accurate and easier. Therefore nerve indentation might predict good surgical outcomes.
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The out-of-body experience (OBE), during which a person feels as if he or she is spatially removed from the physical body, is a mystical phenomenon because of its association with near-death experiences. Literature implicates the cortex at the temporoparietal junction (TPJ) as the possible anatomic substrate for OBE. ⋯ We repetitively induced OBE by subcortical stimulation near the left TPJ during awake craniotomy. Diffusion tensor imaging tractography implicated the posterior thalamic radiation as a possible substrate for autoscopic phenomena.
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Previous clinical studies assumed that early cranioplasty (CP) was mandatory for a favorable neurologic recovery after decompressive craniectomy (DC) for malignant stroke. However, the appropriate timing of the CP procedure after DC remains controversial. This study assessed patients who underwent DC because of cerebral ischemia to determine the appropriate time point of CP and surgical-associated complications. ⋯ The present data suggest that patients who underwent DC for stroke might benefit from CP performed >3 months after DC owing to a lower rate of wound infection.