The present study was carried out on 30 cadavers (5 fresh, 20 preserved adult and 5 fresh stillborn) following injection of red latex through the subclavian and common iliac arteries. The blood supply to the peripheral nerves was studied in general, together with the vascular pedicles to the ulnar, saphenous, sural, deep and superficial peroneal nerves, and the superficial branch of the radial nerve. The nutrient arteries supplying the peripheral nerves came from either the adjacent axial artery or the fasciocutaneous or muscular arteries. They formed anastomotic channels in the epineurium and penetrated it to form a continuous longitudinal artery. Based on the presence of absence of dominant arterial pedicles, five patterns of blood-supply to the nerves could be identified. I: no dominant arterial pedicle; II: only one dominant artery (e.g. artery with a diameter more than 0.8 mm and accompanying the nerve for most of its length); III: only one dominant vessel that divided into ascending and descending branches to supply the nerve; IV: multiple dominant pedicles; V: multiple dominant arterial pedicles forming a continuous artery that accompanied the nerve. The arterial pedicles to the ulnar, saphenous and deep peroneal nerves and the superficial branch of the radial n. had mean diameters of over 0.8 mm, thus being suitable for microvascular anastomosis. Those to the sural nerve were not present in two thirds of the dissected cadavers. In 10% of the cadavers the superficial peroneal nerve had an arterial pedicle that accompanied the nerve for less than two cm with a mean diameter less than 0.8 mm. The ulnar nerve could be very suitable as a donor vascularized nerve graft as it had a dominant vascular pedicle in all the cases studied; however, its use should be restricted to C8 and T1 root damage of the brachial plexus. The superficial branch of the radial n. might be suitable for vascularized nerve grafting, but this is difficult in practice since the radial artery is a major limb artery. The saphenous nerve had a dominant arterial pedicles in all the cadavers dissected and could be the most suitable as a donor vascularized nerve graft, unlike the sural nerve which did not have a dominant arterial pedicle in two-thirds of the specimens. The deep and superficial peroneal nerves may also be unsuitable since the former is accompanied by a major limb vessel while the latter had a dominant vascular pedicle that accompanied the nerve for only a short distance in 10% of the dissected cadavers.
Giant intracranial aneurysms are rare disorders that represent only 5% of all intracranial aneurysms; they have a wide variety of presentations including rupture, embolic effects, and mass effect symptoms that can mislead the diagnosis to tumors rather than aneurysms. Their treatment is difficult and carries higher morbidity and mortality than usual aneurysms due to their complex nature. This study involved retrospective analysis of data of 28 patients, managed between 2006 and 2012, suffering from giant internal carotid artery (ICA) aneurysms with various presenting symptoms, none of which was hemorrhage. They were all evaluated by BOT prior to any intervention; they were subjected to various treatment strategies including selective coiling, parent artery occlusion with or without bypass, aneurysm trapping with or without bypass, and patients were followed for a period ranging from 6 months to 5 years. Out of 26 patients with giant aneurysms with mass effects, 16 patients showed full recovery (61.5 %), 5 showed partial improvement (19.2 %), and 5 showed no change in mass effect symptoms (19.2 %). One patient died (3.5 %). Symptoms such as TIA or epistaxis showed complete recovery. This study shows that a well-designed protocol aiming at parent artery sacrifice will yield good to excellent results in managing ICA giant aneurysms, and it also shows that parent artery sacrifice is superior to other forms of treatment of these lesions regarding recurrence rates, morbidity, and mortality.
In syndromic craniosynostosis, the relation between the supraorbital area and the frontal bone is not good, and it is not possible to reform this area with 1-block advancement. To avoid this problem, the frontal bone is separated from the fronto-orbital bandeau, each is reshaped and remodeled separately, and then both are reattached. The retrusion of the midface, especially in syndromic craniosynostosis, is usually greater than that of cranial bones, so the technique usually separating the midface from the cranium is Le Fort III osteotomy, which allows differential distraction of each part. In this procedure, the cranial and midfacial bones are advanced simultaneously and differentially, both to the planned extent, in a single-stage operation, using rigid external distractor II, correcting exorbitism, respiratory embarrassment, and cranial structures and avoiding eye complications in the future. This procedure was used, with a follow-up, in 10 patients with syndromic craniosynostosis from 2 to 5 years.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.