World Neurosurg
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Although short-term clinical outcomes after basilar artery stent placement have been reported previously, effectiveness of intracranial stenting for vertebrobasilar artery occlusion in the acute phase of ischemic stroke is unclear. ⋯ Stent angioplasty may be a reasonably good treatment option for patients with technically favorable lesions, especially in vertebrobasilar atherosclerotic occlusion with medically or PTA only refractory symptoms. Despite a significant complication rate, most of our patients experienced good to excellent clinical outcomes and were free of vertebrobasilar ischemia at late midterm follow-up.
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Case Reports
Surgical management for Destructive Atlantoaxial Spondyloarthropathy in Long Term Hemodialysis Patients.
Atlantoaxial spondyloarthropathy most often results from rheumatoid arthritis, cancer metastasis, or basilar invagination. Dialysis-related spondyloarthropathy is a rare cause of spinal deformity and cervical myelopathy at the atlantoaxial joint. We report 2 patients on long-term hemodialysis who presented with atlantoaxial spondyloarthropathy. ⋯ Although the surgical management of these patients involves many challenges, appropriate decompression and fusion surgery is an effective treatment option.
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Spontaneous meningoencephaloceles of the lateral sphenoid sinus are rare entities, and their peculiar location represents a surgical challenge due to the importance of a wide exposure and skull base reconstruction. They are thought to arise from the congenital base defect of the lateral sphenoid or in some cases have been postulated to represent a rare manifestation of altered cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) dynamics. We report the first case in the literature of a Chiari malformation type I (CMI) and a lateral sphenoid encephalocele, revising the theoretic etiology and surgical technique of endoscopic repair. ⋯ The association of spontaneous lateral sphenoid encephaloceles with CMI is distinctly unusual. Predisposing factors and disruption of CSF dynamics may play a major role in the development of these rare complications in patients with CMI. Because of their distinct location, transethmoid or transpterygoid endoscopic approaches represent an excellent surgical technique to treat these lesions thanks to their wide and direct visualization of the entire skull base defect following the encephalocele excision, allowing an adequate multilayer repair and lateral sphenoid recess occlusion.
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We describe a case of a fourth ventricular mass requiring a modified approach to its management owing to a rare variation of the occipital sinus (OS). ⋯ Rare variations of the venous/sinus anatomy may fundamentally change the surgical management plan, and recognizing such variations is crucial to minimizing the risk of potentially fatal complications.
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We report a case of ruptured massa intermedia (MI) as a sequela of hydrocephalus. ⋯ Absent MI is not uncommon in hydrocephalic patients, and it is assumed to be the result of rupture from acute dilatation of the third ventricle. Our case report proves this assumption and documents the presence and absence of the MI before and after developing hydrocephalus.