Placement of ventriculo-peritoneal (VP) shunts is an established procedure for treatment of hydrocephalus. With increasing longevity following successful treatment, complications are becoming more common. The authors reviewed 350 VP shunts in 242 patients and found five uncommon complications relating to the peritoneal end of the catheter: (a) cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) pseudocyst of the lesser sac, (b) subphrenic CSF loculation, (c) bowel perforation and formation of a CSF-enteric fistula, (d) intrathoracic migration of the tip of the shunt, and (e) intractable CSF ascites.
Vocal cord paralysis is a relatively common entity, usually resulting from a pathologic process of the vagus nerve or its recurrent laryngeal branch. It is rarely caused by intralaryngeal lesions. Fourteen patients with recurrent laryngeal nerve paralysis (RLNP) were evaluated by laryngography, computed tomography (CT), or both. In the evaluation of the paramedian cord, CT was limited in its ability to differentiate between tumor or RLNP as the cause of the fixed cord, but it yielded more information than laryngography on the structural abnormalities of the larynx and pre-epiglottic and paralaryngeal spaces. Laryngography revealed distinct features of RLNP and is the procedure of choice for evaluation of functional abnormalities of the larynx until further experience with faster CT scanners and dynamic scanning of the larynx is gained.
The value of different diagnostic tests in the detection of colovesical fistulas was studied in 28 surgically proven cases seen during the last 10 years at the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor. Etiologies were diverticulitis (19), Crohn disease (three), postradiation therapy (four), previous trauma (one), and bladder carcinoma (one). The fistulas were demonstrated by barium enema in 10 of 20 patients and by cystography in eight of 26. Cystoscopy was diagnostic in 11 of 25 patients and sigmoidoscopy in four of 24. Methybene
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