World Neurosurg
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Patients with cervical spinal cord injuries (CSCIs) may be required to undergo tracheostomy. However, in patients undergoing anterior cervical fusion (ACF), percutaneous dilational tracheostomy (PDT) may be delayed given the risk of cross-contamination. We aimed to evaluate the risk of surgical site infection (SSI) in early PDT in patients with traumatic CSCI after ACF. ⋯ Early PDT within 4 days after ACF did not increase the risk of SSI compared with late PDT in patients with traumatic CSCIs.
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To investigate the effect of the application of a microsurgical space restrictor in microsurgical simulation training. ⋯ Microsurgical space restrictor use can improve the effect of microsurgical simulation training and help trainees better master microsurgical operation skills.
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Poor bone quality is a known risk factor for hardware failure and adjacent segment disease after lumbar fusion. One new method of analyzing bone quality is the vertebral bone quality (VBQ) score, which can be obtained from preoperative lumbar magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scans. We decided to evaluate whether patients' VBQ scores were associated with reoperation after lumbar fusion. ⋯ This study found that bone quality, according to the VBQ score rather than the DXA T score, is an important risk factor for reoperation after lumbar fusion surgery. Therefore, this MRI-based tool may be used to assist surgeons in preoperative planning for spine surgeries with the goal of reducing the risk of requiring reoperation.
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Case Reports
A case of intracerebral hemorrhage during the untreated course of a benign dural arteriovenous fistula.
The natural history of cranial dural arteriovenous fistulas (DAVFs) without cortical venous drainage (i.e., benign DAVF) is considered a potential predictor of a benign clinical course. We report a case of intracerebral hemorrhage due to the conversion from a benign to an aggressive DAVF during 10 months of conservative therapy, which, to the best of our knowledge, is the first reported case of its kind. ⋯ Conversion to aggressive DAVF in this patient was probably due to spontaneous stenosis or thrombosis of the venous outflow. Intracranial hemorrhage can occur within 1 year from the detection of benign DAVFs, and elevated D-dimer may predict the conversion to aggressive DAVFs.
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Ossification of the posterior longitudinal ligament (OPLL) is a hyperostotic condition resulting in a progressive narrowing of the spinal canal and subsequent neurologic deficits. Although systemic and local factors in combination with genetic abnormality have been considered in its etiopathogenesis, OPLL remains a poorly understood pathology. Surgical management of OPLL and the choice of the most appropriate treatment are still controversial issues. Here the authors report a series of OPLL-affected patients treated by "only-fixation" technique. ⋯ Decision making in the surgical management of cervical OPLL is still controversial. The concept of spinal instability has been shown to be a nodal point in the pathogenesis of OPLL, and "only-spinal fixation" can be considered a rationale for an appropriate surgical treatment.