In primary or relapsing grossly cystic craniopharyngiomas most of the problems related to the neoplastic mass may be, even if temporarily, improved by reducing volume of the cyst. A major surgical approach is unjustified when the aim is only to empty the cyst contents. Drainage of the cyst cavity by means of derivative techniques may be as effective and less invasive; in combined management plans that such tumours often require, they are, therefore, useful complementary procedures that can achieve long-lasting relief of symptoms, provided that the cyst is unilocular. Technical features and indications for such methods, with special regard to the techniques of sump drainage and of tube ventriculocystostomy, are discussed on the basis of the few reported series and of 6 personal cases. Usually only palliative aims are achieved, waiting for more definitive treatment; in a few selected cases, however, they may be quite effective.
Twenty-seven patients with intractable facial pain underwent dorsal root entry zone thermocoagulation lesion of the nucleus caudalis of the spinal trigeminal nucleus. Retrospective review revealed a success rate of 85 % in the immediate postoperative period declining to 52% on subsequent follow-up. The best results were in the subgroup of patients with postherpetic neuralgia, of which 67% achieved definite relief. There tended to be some correlation of satisfactory results and pain quality as well as extent of pain along trigeminal territory. The operative morbidity was low although most patients were observed to have a mild transient ipsilateral dysmetria.
To determine the effects of ventral cervical and selective spinal accessory nerve rhizotomy on spasmodic torticollis, 58 patients who had undergone surgery between 1979 and 1987 were reviewed retrospectively. At the time of surgery, each nerve rootlet was electrically stimulated to determine its effect on the nuchal musculature prior to sectioning. Forty-nine patients (85%) had a marked improvement in their condition, with 33 (57%) attaining an excellent result and 16 (28%) noting significant improvement. Patients complained of abnormal head posture, nuchal muscle spasms, and pain prior to surgery. Muscle spasms were completely relieved in 42 patients (72%) and markedly reduced in 10 (17%). Of the 47 patients with preoperative pain, 30 (64%) were free of their pain and eight (17%) noted that the pain was reduced in intensity and frequency. Thirty-four patients (59%) reported that their resting head posture was restored to a neutral position. The likelihood that a patient's head posture returned to normal was inversely proportional to the preoperative duration of the spasmodic torticollis. Twenty-six patients (45%) suffered mild transient difficulty with swallowing solid foods in the immediate postoperative period. In most cases these minor difficulties abated in the months following surgery.
The records of the first 18 patients with intractable facial pain treated with nucleus caudalis dorsal root entry zone lesions were reviewed. The pain etiology varied but the largest group was that of post-herpetic neuralgia. Within the immediate postoperative period 90% of patients had satisfactory pain relief in comparison to 58% on subsequent follow-up. Seventy-one percent of those with post-herpetic neuralgia had satisfactory relief on subsequent follow-up. Favorable results tended to correlate with a lesser preoperative sensory deficit, pain restricted to trigeminal distributions and pain of a burning or lancinating/penetrating quality.
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