World Neurosurg
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Review Historical Article
The pioneering contribution of italian surgeons to skull base surgery.
The origin of neurosurgery as a modern, successful, and separate branch of surgery could be dated back to the end of the 19th century. The most important development of surgery occurred in Europe, particularly in Italy, where there was a unique environment, allowing brilliant open-minded surgeons to perform, with success, neurosurgical operations. Neurosurgery began at the skull base. ⋯ In this paper, we report at a glance the contributions of Tito Vanzetti from Padua (1809-1888), for his operation on a destructive skull base cyst that had, indeed, an intracranial expansion; of Davide Giordano (1864-1954) from Venice, who described the first transnasal approach to the pituitary gland; and, most importantly, of Francesco Durante from Messina (1844-1934), who was the first surgeon in the history of neurosurgery to successfully remove a cranial base meningioma. They carried out the first detailed reported surgical excision of intracranial lesions at the skull base, diagnosed only through clinical signs; used many of the advances of the 19th century; and conceived and performed new operative strategies and approaches. Their operations were radical enough to allow the patient to survive the surgery and, in the case of Durante, for the first time, to obtain more than 12 years of good survival at a time when a tumor of this type would have been fatal.
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The introduction of extended endoscopic endonasal approaches for the management of midline skull base lesions has brought again the focus on the problem of postoperative cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) leak management. Notwithstanding the improvements in reconstruction techniques that have reduced the rate of postoperative CSF leakage, no technique has proven to be thoroughly effective. ⋯ An endoscope-guided sealant technique with fibrin glue used while the patient is awake has proven, in our experience, to be effective in reducing the rate of reoperations in the management of postoperative CSF leaking after endoscopic endonasal approaches for the treatment of intradural skull base lesions. This technique, which needs larger case series to be validated, could be considered in the spectrum of possibilities to manage selected postoperative CSF leakages.
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The true rate of intraoperative cerebrospinal fluid (iCSF) leak during pituitary surgery is not well known because small iCSF leaks are easily missed. Our objective is to determine the rate and significance of iCSF leak in endoscopic pituitary surgery with intrathecal (IT) fluorescein administration and determine factors predictive of iCSF leak. ⋯ The rate of iCSF leak during endoscopic pituitary surgery using IT fluorescein is higher than previously reported. Tumor diameter and volume are best predictors of the risk of iCSF leak. Based on this knowledge and a closure algorithm that includes a lumbar drain and nasoseptal flap for larger tumors (>2.5 cm), we can conclude that the postoperative CSF leak rate remains exceptionally low, particularly once the learning curve is overcome.
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The global incidence of spinal cord injury (SCI) is 15-40 cases per million people, with the socioeconomic and healthcare costs amounting to nearly $10 billion per annum in the USA alone. Despite substantial advances in medical care and surgical technology, many patients with SCI still experience significant long-term neurologic disability. ⋯ Improved generation and transfection techniques, combined with positive experimental outcomes in SCI models, suggest that adult-derived induced pluripotent stem cells could be a genuine alternative to embryonic stem cells for clinical treatments. For translation from bench to bedside, the efficacy of induced pluripotent stem cell-derived neural stem and progenitor cells in suitable SCI models needs to be validated further and backed up with rigorous early-stage clinical trials.
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Review Case Reports
Usefulness of tumor blood flow imaging by intraoperative indocyanine green videoangiography in hemangioblastoma surgery.
Hemangioblastomas remain a surgical challenge because of their arteriovenous malformation-like character. Recently, indocyanine green (ICG) videoangiography has been applied to neurosurgical vascular surgery. The aim of this study was to evaluate the usefulness of tumor blood flow imaging by intraoperative ICG videoangiography in surgery for hemangioblastomas. ⋯ In surgery for hemangioblastomas, careful interpretation of dynamic ICG images can provide useful information on transit feeders and unexposed hidden vessels that cannot be directly visualized by ICG.