The authors report the results of a long-term follow-up study of the effects of the physiologically defined selective VIM (nucleus ventralis intermedius)-thalamotomy on tremor of Parkinson's disease in 27 patients and essential tremor in 16 patients. The follow-up period ranged from 3.25 to 10 years (mean 6.58 years). In 43 patients a total of 50 operations (including four bilateral operations and three reoperations) were carried out. The early (2 to 4 weeks after surgery) and late effects on the tremors were determined clinically and electromyographically. Fourteen parkinsonian cases were treated with minimal lesions (about 40 cu mm). Their late results were very similar to the early results: in 10, the tremors were completely abolished, three had a slight residual tremor, and one underwent reoperation 3 months after the first surgery. Eleven essential tremor cases were treated with minimal lesions. Six of these tremors were completely abolished, four patients had slight residual tremors, and one patient with a recurrence underwent reoperation 2 years after the initial surgery. In these 23 successful operations with minimal lesions (excluding two cases with reoperation), the tremor was abolished without discernible long-lasting side effects. The other 23 operations on 16 patients with Parkinson's disease (including one reoperation) and on seven with essential tremor (one of whom also had a minimal lesion on the other side) involved relatively large lesions. In this group, the surgery was successful in almost every case. It was concluded that radiographically and physiologically monitored selective VIM-thalamotomy for parkinsonian and essential tremor is effective even when lesioning is minimal. Moreover, the beneficial effect is maintained over a long period of time.
Hinge technique is a new method for cerebral decompression that allows the bone flap to move outward in response to brain swelling and essentially allows reconstruction of the cranial vault as a minor procedure under local anesthesia. This retrospective study assessed outcomes following the use of this new decompressive technique. During an approximately 7-year period (June 2004 to March 2011), 58 patients who had suffered head trauma or stroke underwent cerebral decompression using the hinge technique or conventional decompressive craniectomy. Patients were assessed with the Glasgow Coma Scale (GCS), the Glasgow Outcome Scale (GOS), and the modified Rankin scale (mRS). Twenty-one patients (16 males, 5 females; age range, 21-78 yrs; mean age, 57.4 ± 15.5 yrs) underwent cerebral decompression using the hinge technique, and 37 patients (18 males, 19 females; age range, 5-83 yrs; mean age, 54.1 ± 20.9 yrs) underwent conventional decompressive craniectomy. There was no significant difference in preoperative GCS or postoperative GOS or mRS between the two groups. Six patients in the decompressive craniectomy group and none of the patients in the hinge technique group developed bone flap infection (p = 0.02). The bone flap was removed in two cases in the hinge technique group due to low cerebral perfusion pressure as well as elevated intracranial pressure (ICP). The hinge technique with ICP monitoring was effective and safe for management for head trauma or stroke and was not associated with bone flap infection.
Five patients with spontaneous dissecting vertebral aneurysms presenting with subarachnoid hemorrhage were treated with endovascular proximal balloon occlusion after a successful balloon Matas' test. Occlusion was performed in the extracranial portion of the vertebral artery after the potentially dangerous period of cerebral vasospasm. Two patients rebled preoperatively during the waiting period. Although angiograms demonstrated residual aneurysmal dilatation for four of the five patients, postoperative hemorrhages or progression of the dissection were not observed during the 19- to 48-month follow-up period. Only one patient experienced transient postoperative ischemic complication. Although the timing of the procedure and the site of occlusion remain controversial, proximal balloon occlusion of the vertebral artery appears to be a safe and effective therapy for patients with dissecting vertebral aneurysms presenting with subarachnoid hemorrhages. This method provides an important, less invasive alternative for this condition.
A 64-year-old female presented with rapid onset of left ophthalmoplegia and truncal ataxia, after experiencing diplopia due to left abducens nerve palsy for a year. She had undergone surgery twice for left trigeminal neuralgia caused by a large intracranial epidermoid cyst at the age of 48 and 52 years. The intracranial epidermoid cyst grew and became predominantly enhanced by contrast medium on computed tomography (CT) and T 1 -weighted magnetic resonance (MR) imaging, which had not been observed earlier. The tumor was partially removed and the histological diagnosis was squamous cell carcinoma (SCC). Radiation therapy was administered, but she presented with paraplegia of the bilateral lower extremities and anesthesia due to spinal multiple metastases of SCC one year later. Radiation therapy was administered for the spinal lesions, but she died of multiple metastases to the cerebellum and medulla oblongata with hydrocephalus 2 years after the third surgery. Transformation of intracranial epidermoid cysts to SCC appears as predominant enhancement on CT or T 1 -weighted MR imaging with rapid deterioration of neurological features. All reported cases of malignant transformation of intracranial epithelial cysts to SCC with leptomeningeal carcinomatosis have occurred in intracranial epidermoid cysts.
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