In patients with severe tremor that is resistant to drug therapy, stereotactic coagulation can achieve a satisfactory and lasting reduction of the movement disorders. Very few long-term studies have been conducted following stereotactic operations. From 1964 to 1984, 104 patients with a diagnosis of essential tremor were operated on in the Division of Stereotaxy and Neuronuclear Medicine. After an average follow-up period of 8.6 years, 65 patients were examined. In 80%, the success of the stereotactic operation was still evident. Complete disappearance or substantial reduction of the tremor was determined in 69% and moderate improvement in 11.9% of the patients.
We report nine patients who developed dystonia following head trauma. The most frequent form was hemidystonia only (six patients). One patient presented with hemidystonia plus torticollis, one with bilateral hemidystonia and one with torticollis only. Seven patients sustained a severe head injury, and two had a mild head injury. At the time of injury, six were younger than 10 years, two were adolescents, and the patient with torticollis only was an adult. Except in the patient with torticollis only, the onset of dystonia varied considerably from months to years. All patients with hemidystonia had posthemiplegic dystonia of delayed onset. Seven out of 8 patients with hemidystonia had lesions involving the contralateral caudate or putamen, as demonstrated by CT and MR. The patient with hemidystonia plus torticollis had no lesion to the basal ganglia, but a contralateral pontomesencephalic lesion. Response to medical treatment was generally poor. Functional stereotactic operations were performed in seven patients. A variety of factors may be responsible for the vascular or nonvascular posttraumatic basal ganglia lesions, which may lead to dystonia. The pathophysiology seems to be more complex than thought previously. We believe that dystonia following head injury is not as rare as is assumed. Awareness of its characteristics and optimized diagnostic procedures will lead to wider recognition of this entity.
In a series of 225 patients with astrocytomas (grades I-IV) of the basal ganglia and the thalamus, 20 had a movement disorder. In all patients the histological diagnosis was verified by stereotactic biopsy. Tremor was observed in twelve patients, dystonia in eight, chorea in three, and chorealballismus and myoclonus in one. The tumour involved the thalamus in 16 patients. Corticospinal tract dysfunction was evident in 70% ofthe patients with movement disorders and in 73% ofthose without. Demographic, clinical, histological and neuroradiological data of the patients with a movement disorder were compared with the data of patients without. CT data yielded no differences with respect to the involvement of anatomical structures. Movement disorders were significantly associated with low-grade astrocytomas.
SUMMARY:Cervical transforaminal blocks are frequently performed as a treatment of cervical radicular pain. These blocks are performed mostly under fluoroscopy, but a CT-guided technique also has been described. We describe a modification that leads to a more extraforaminal than transforaminal and equally selective nerve root block. C ervical selective nerve root blocks (CSNRB) are commonly performed with fluoroscopic guidance.1 However, CTguidance is also possible and has been described. CT guidance offers the advantage of enhanced anatomic resolution and a more precise positioning of the needle tip.2 Disadvantages are extended procedure times and increased exposure to radiation. In both the fluoroscopic and the CT-guided CSNRB, the aim is to block the root within the foramen. Therefore, the patient is placed in the supine position, and the foramen is reached laterally in a nearly horizontal plane. We describe a modification of the CT guidance technique in which the patient is in the prone position and the foramen is reached dorsally, with the tip of the needle aiming at the outer confines of the foramen. This technique leads to an extraforaminal, but still selective, nerve root block. It may imply a smaller risk for devastating complications such as spinal cord infarction or cerebellar infarction.
The authors present the clinical, histopathologic, and immunomorphologic data of 13 intracranial gangliogliomas. Preoperative computed tomography scans showed a commonly cystic tumor of variable density. Six tumors were completely excised and seven were subtotally resected. After a mean follow‐up of 4.5 ± 2.6 years, 11 patients are asymptomatic or only slightly incapacitated. All tumors were examined with a panel of neuronal and neuroendocrine markers. Immunoreactivity (IR) to anti‐neurofilament polypeptide (clone 2F11) was observed in neuronal processes in ten cases and in neuronal perikarya in five. With anti‐synaptophysin (clone SY38), IR was present along the lining of ganglion cell perikarya and processes in 11 tumors whereas staining of the perinuclear cytoplasm was prominent in two. IR to anti‐chromogranin A (clone LK2H10) was observed within the neuronal perikarya in eight cases. Only one ganglioglioma of the brain stem showed IR for tyrosine‐hydroxylase (clone 2/40/15) and dopamine‐beta‐hydroxylase in some neoplastic ganglion cells. In this study, synaptophysin was the most reliable neuronal marker. For immunocytochemical identification of neoplastic neurons in ganglioglioma as well as other tumors with neuronal differentiation the authors propose a panel of well‐characterized monoclonal antibodies against neurofilament polypeptides, synaptophysin, and chromogranin A to support the histomorphologic diagnoses. Cancer 68:2192–2201, 1991.
CT-stereotactic fibrinolysis is an effective alternative to surgical and conservative therapies for intracerebral hematoma. The method consists of stereotactically puncturing and partially evacuating the hematoma. After fibrinolysis using urokinase, the residual hematoma is completely evacuated through a catheter inserted in the cavity of the hematoma. The operation is usually performed under local anesthesia. Stereotactic methods are safer and less invasive than other methods. Since October 1985, a total of 85 patients have been treated with this method in the Department of Stereotaxy and Neuronuclear Medicine at the University of Freiburg Medical School. Although 25 patients died (29.4%) during the mean follow-up period of 20 months, only 16 (18.8%) died in the acute postoperative phase or within the first 60 days after evacuation. Eighteen patients (21.2%) had died six months after the operation. The quality of life of the 60 surviving patients, as measured on the Karnofsky Scale at follow-up, was very good to good in 70% and moderate in 23.3%. Only 6.7% of the patients were so disabled that they required special care and assistance or had to be placed in a nursing home. The long-term results are thus very encouraging.
The surgical indication for spontaneous cerebellar hemorrhage is not as controversial as the operative management of intracranial hemorrhage. Timing of the operation is crucial: intervening too early can produce an additional strain on the patient and an increased risk, while waiting too long to evacuate the hematoma can be fatal. This dilemma may be a factor in the relatively high mortality and morbidity rates following both operative and conservative treatment that have been reported in the literature (42.5% and 30%, respectively). In long-term studies on 14 patients, the authors have shown that stereotactic puncture and fibrinolysis for cerebellar hemorrhage is a valuable alternative to treatments used currently. The method consists of computerized tomography (CT)-guided stereotactic puncture and partial evacuation of the hematoma. After fibrinolysis with urokinase, the residual hematoma can be completely evacuated via a catheter introduced into the cavity of the hematoma. Only one of the 14 patients died in the direct postoperative phase; the remaining patients were enjoying a good to very good quality of life 6 months after the acute event. Two patients subsequently died as a result of pneumonia and cerebral infarction, respectively; both conditions were unrelated to the hemorrhage. The authors conclude that the CT-guided stereotactic method is simple, effective, and safe, and can be applied to patients of any age.
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