Postoperative pain after surgery in the cerebellopontine angle (CPA) is acknowledged to occur, but is rarely taken into account as a factor in the analysis of morbidity of such surgery. It is widely acknowledged that some patients, having undergone such surgery, particularly by means of the suboccipital approach, report significant post-operative pain and headache. This study was undertaken to determine the incidence and severity of pain after excision of acoustic neuromas and to establish whether this differed between the suboccipital and translabyrinthine routes. Ninety-one percent of all patients (n = 58), who had the suboccipital approach used for removal of their tumor, were surveyed. A smaller group (n = 40), matched for tumor size, age, and sex, but in whom the translabyrinthine approach was used, was similarly studied. A standard questionnaire, designed to detect and quantify postoperative pain, was administered to each patient. Of patients who underwent tumor excision by means of the suboccipital approach, 63.7% experienced significant local discomfort and headache, whereas this was notably absent in all those who had undergone translabyrinthine excision. In view of the significant morbidity noted to follow the suboccipital approach, several modifications of the surgical technique used were devised.
The rate of CSF leakage after TL and RS procedures has remained stable. Factors influencing its occurrence include tumor size but not surgical approach. The TL-related leaks had a significantly higher surgical repair rate than RS-related leaks, an additional factor to consider when choosing an approach. The problem of CSF leakage becomes increasingly important as nonsurgical treatments for acoustic neuroma are developed.
Cerebrospinal fluid leaks and associated meningitis are the most common life-threatening complications of surgery for acoustic neuromas. This retrospective study reviews 319 patients who had surgery for 321 acoustic tumors at the Sunnybrook Health Sciences Center, University of Toronto, from April 1975 to March 1990. Cerebrospinal fluid leaks occurred after 13.4% of primary tumor operations. Surgical repair was required in 6.2% of all patients; 4.4% needed more than one operation. Meningitis occurred in 5.3% of all patients. These complications were more common in larger tumors and after the combined translabyrinthine middle fossa approach. Transnasopharyngeal eustachian tube obliteration was used to stop recurrent cerebrospinal fluid leaks in two patients.
ABSTRACT:Fifty-nine patients were treated in a prospective, randomized comparison of pentobarbital and mannitol for the control of intracranial hypertension resulting from head injury. Patients with elevated intracranial pressure (ICP) after evacuation of intracranial hematomas were randomized to one of two treatment groups; mannitol initially or pentobarbital initially, followed by the second drug as required by further elevation of ICP. Similarly, patients with raised ICP but without hematomas requiring evacuation were randomly assigned to two treatment groups in an identical paradigm.Those with ICP elevation and no hematoma treated with pentobarbital as initial therapy had a 77% mortality compared to a 41% mortality for those with mannitol as initial treatment. Patients with evacuated hematomas had mortalities of 40% and 43% (no significant difference) for pentobarbital and mannitol respectively. In both no-hematoma and hematoma streams pentobarbital was less effective than mannitol for control of raised ICP.Multivariate statistical analysis indicates that pentobarbital coma is not better than mannitol for the treatment of intracranial hypertension and may be harmful in no-hematoma patients with intracranial hypertension after head injury. RESUME: Au cours d'une 6tude prospective randomisee, 59 patients ont 6t6 trails par Pentobarbital et Mannitol pour controle de l'hypertension intracranienne secondaire a un traumatisme cranien. Les patients dont la pression intra-cranienne (PIC) 6tait 61ev6e apres Evacuation d'un hgmatome intra-cranien ont 6t6 ranges au hasard dans deux groupes respectifs de traitement: administration, initialement, soit de Mannitol, soit de Pentobarbital; addition, subs6quemment, de l'un ou l'autre agent, advenant une nouvelle Elevation de la PIC. De meme, des patients avec PIC elev6e, mais sans h6matome a Evacuer, ont €t& disbribuEs au hasard dans deux groupes de traitement selon le meme protocole.Le groupe avec pression intra-cranienne dlevee et sans hematome, qui fut traits initialement par Pentobarbital a eu un taux de mortality de 77%, contre 41% pour le groupe debutant le traitement par du Mannitol. Les patients porteurs d'hdmatomes ope>6s ont eu des morbidity de 40% et 43% (sans difference significative), selon qu'ils Staient trails respectivement par Pentobarbital ou Mannitol. Dans les deux groupes -avec et sans hematome -le Pentobarbital fut moins efficace que le Mannitol pour le controle de la PIC 61ev6e.L'analyse statistique multifactorielle indique que le coma par Pentobarbital n'est pas preferable au Mannitol dans le traitement de l'hypertension intra-cranienne et qu'il peut etre nefaste chez les patients sans h6matome porteurs d'une hypertension intracranienne secondaire a un traumatisme cranien.
The anomaly presented in our two cases differs from the established classification of congenital abnormalities of the posterior arch of the atlas, suggesting a different embryological defect. The hypoplastic posterior C1 arch created a congenitally narrowed spinal canal in our patients, rendering the spinal cord more susceptible to compression related to degenerative changes of the spine. Surgical removal of the shortened posterior C1 arch and surrounding degenerative ligaments is an effective treatment for symptomatic patients with this condition.
Background-Postpartum cerebral angiopathy as a cause of hemorrhagic stroke in young women is not well recognized.It is unknown whether this disorder represents a true inflammatory vasculitis or transient vasoconstriction related to the hormonal events of pregnancy and the postpartum period. Case Description-A 39-year-old woman presented with postpartum intracranial hemorrhage and, 32 months later, with subarachnoid hemorrhage, following normal pregnancies. Cerebral angiography obtained after each stroke demonstrated diffuse irregularity of branches of the middle cerebral arteries consistent with a diffuse vasospastic process or classic vasculitis. Neurological deficits resolved and results of a transcranial Doppler study normalized after a short course of high-dose corticosteroids following the second stroke. Conclusions-Postpartum cerebral angiopathy should be considered in the differential diagnosis of recurrent intracranial hemorrhagic stroke in young women. Recognition of this condition may preclude treatment with potentially toxic therapies for vasculitis and will have important implications for counseling women on subsequent pregnancies. (Stroke.
Twenty-one patients with universal syndesmophytosis due to ankylosing spondylitis were identified in a consecutive series of 1578 patients with acute spine and spinal cord injuries. They were predominantly male, older than spinal cord-injured patients in general, and most were injured by falls. Approximately one-half were managed by halo-vest immobilization alone with good clinical and radiological outcomes. The remainder required surgery either for recurrent dislocation or for spinal cord compression associated with neurological deterioration. Extradural hematoma, a recognized cause of spinal cord compression in ankylosing spondylitis patients with spinal fractures, was encountered in two patients. Herniated intervertebral disc as a cause of spinal cord compression in ankylosing spondylitis does not appear to have been previously reported and was recognized three times in the present series, once in association with extradural hematoma. The pathology of ankylosing spondylitis is such that the nucleus pulposus tends to be spared, allowing disc herniation to occur in the heavily ossified spine. In virtually all patients, satisfactory correction of the flexion deformity could be safely accomplished following spinal fracture. It is concluded that fracture/dislocations of the cervical spine should be managed initially by halo-vest immobilization, without prior traction and with careful incremental correction of flexion deformity. Decompression is performed as required for extradural hematoma or intervertebral disc herniation, and internal fixation is carried out for recurrent dislocation.
Primary intraspinal PNETs are rare tumors and carry a poor prognosis.
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