Neurologia medico-chirurgica
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Neurol. Med. Chir. (Tokyo) · Oct 2005
Craniovertebral junction realignment for the treatment of basilar invagination with syringomyelia: preliminary report of 12 cases.
Twelve selected patients, eight males and four females aged 14 to 50 years, with syringomyelia associated with congenital craniovertebral bony anomalies including basilar invagination and fixed atlantoaxial dislocation, and associated Chiari I malformation in eight, were treated by atlantoaxial joint manipulation and restoration of the craniovertebral region alignment between October 2002 and March 2004. Three patients had a history of trauma prior to the onset of symptoms. Spastic quadriparesis and ataxia were the most prominent symptoms. ⋯ Following surgery all patients showed symptomatic improvement and restoration of craniovertebral alignment during follow up from 3 to 20 months (mean 7 months). Radiological improvement of the syrinx could not be evaluated as stainless steel metal plates, screws, and spacers were used for fixation. Manipulation of the atlantoaxial joints and restoring the anatomical craniovertebral alignments in selected cases of syringomyelia leads to remarkable and sustained clinical recovery, and is probably the optimum surgical treatment.
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Neurol. Med. Chir. (Tokyo) · Oct 2005
Case ReportsPeritoneal shunt tube migration into the stomach--case report--.
A 47-year-old man presented with repeated headache and feverishness 3.5 years after undergoing ventriculoperitoneal shunt surgery for normal pressure hydrocephalus secondary to subarachnoid hemorrhage. Abdominal computed tomography revealed that the peritoneal catheter was encased by fibrous tissue and the distal end of the catheter had migrated into the stomach. The diagnosis was spontaneous gastric perforation by the ventriculoperitoneal shunt. The fibrous tissue was expected to seal the very small gastric perforation, so the catheter was successfully extracted through a scalp incision without abdominal surgical intervention.
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Neurol. Med. Chir. (Tokyo) · Oct 2005
Awake surgery for glioma resection in eloquent areas--Zurich's experience and review--.
Awake surgery was performed in a series of 21 patients with gliomas in eloquent areas with the use of intraoperative electrical mapping. Gross total removal was performed in 18 patients. There was no operative mortality. ⋯ Extensive radical resection of gliomas prolongs the overall survival and improves the patient's quality of life. However, surgical resection of gliomas located within the sensorimotor or language areas remains a neurosurgical challenge in reducing eloquent neurological sequelae. Awake surgery with intraoperative functional mapping is a safe approach to maximize the extent of tumor removal and to minimize the resultant neurological deficits in the treatment of glioma involving the eloquent cortex.