World Neurosurg
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The benefits of multiple interventions on the recurrence of high-grade gliomas are renowned. However, the real effect of repeated operations on the survival parameters does not seem to have been assessed. The aim of the present study was to determine whether reoperation for selected patients is safe and feasible. ⋯ These data showed excellent outcomes in terms of OS and PFS and clinical conditions after multiple surgical procedures. Therefore, reintervention appears to be a feasible and safe solution for selected patients.
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Invasive pituitary adenomas often recurred after postoperative radiotherapy and are difficult to treat. Temozolomide is an alkylating cytostaticum and has been reported to reduce pituitary tumor size and hormone hypersecretion. However, this is far from enough. Pituitary adenomas have relatively high expression of vascular endothelial growth factor. Therefore an antiangiogenic agent has been used in a small number of aggressive or malignant pituitary tumors after recurrence. Apatinib (YN968D1) is a small-molecule antiangiogenic agent that selectively inhibits VEGFR-2 and also mildly inhibits c-Kit and c-Src tyrosine kinases, abundant in invasive pituitary adenomas. ⋯ We successfully treated this patient with recurrent invasive pituitary adenoma with temozolomide and apatinib for 31.5 months without recurrence. Angiogenesis is an active process in the cases of invasive pituitary adenomas that cannot be controlled by conventional therapy.
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Although chronic subdural hematoma (CSDH) has a good prognosis after classical minimally-invasive drainage surgery, severe complications still occur at a substantial rate. Cerebral hyperperfusion syndrome (CHS), which is a common severe complication after carotid endarterectomy or carotid artery stenting for cervical carotid artery stenosis, is rare after drainage surgery for a CSDH. ⋯ CHS can cause severe postoperative complications after drainage surgery for CSDH. Subcortical low-intensity fluid-attenuated inversion recovery imaging is a useful investigation for early detection of CHS in CSDH, and arterial spin labeling imaging is an effective minimally-invasive modality for confirming the diagnosis.
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Lumbar pyogenic spondylodiscitis (LPS) is still a tangled problem in its management, especially with increasing rates of cases who underwent different spinal procedures and in patients with chronic medical disease. One-stage posterior direct transforminal lumbar thorough debridement of septic lesion, decompression, and spondylodesis (TLTDDS) are the main goals in treatment of complicated LPS without additional morbidity of anterior surgery. This is a retrospective assessment of the clinical, laboratory, functional, and radiologic outcomes in 25 patients with LPS who underwent the TLTDDS procedure. ⋯ TLTDDS surgery is an effective procedure in the treatment of symptomatic LPS and allows abscess evacuation with adequate neural decompression, segmental kyphosis correction, and functional improvement.
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Cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) fistulas are among the most clinically important and frequent complications of transsphenoidal surgery for pituitary adenomas. Between the adenoma and the CSF, a "barrier" exists that consists of ≤3 elements. These, from cephalad to caudad, are the arachnoid, dura mater (sellar diaphragm), and pituitary glandular tissue. The objective of the present study was to determine whether the presence or absence of any of these 3 anatomical elements would be associated with the development of an intraoperative CSF fistula. ⋯ The anatomical architecture forming the roof of the pituitary fossa is an important determinant of intraoperative CSF fistula risk. When the barrier consists of only the arachnoid, the risk will be significantly greater than when the barrier contains additional elements. Preoperative magnetic resonance imaging would be useful to determine the type of the existing barrier.