Journal of neurosurgery
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Journal of neurosurgery · Oct 2022
Long-term efficacy of vestibular neurotomy in disabling Ménière's disease and Tumarkin drop attacks.
When Ménière's disease (MD) becomes disabling due to the frequency of attacks or the appearance of drop attacks (i.e., Tumarkin otolithic crisis) despite "conservative" medical and surgical treatments, a radical treatment like vestibular neurotomy (VN) is possible. An ideal MD treatment would relieve symptoms immediately and persist after the therapy. The aim of this study was to identify if VN was effective after 10 years of follow-up regarding vertigo and drop attacks, and to collect the immediate complications. ⋯ In case of disabling MD (disabling vertigo refractory to conservative vestibular treatments-Tumarkin drop attacks), VN via the retrosigmoid approach must be the prioritized proposal in comparison to intratympanic gentamicin injections, because of the extremely low complication rate and the immediate and long-lasting effect of this treatment on vertigo and falls.
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Journal of neurosurgery · Oct 2022
Outcome of endovascular treatment in acute basilar artery occlusion with National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale score 10-19.
Authors of this study aimed to investigate the efficacy and safety of endovascular treatment (EVT) versus standard medical treatment (SMT) alone in patients with acute basilar artery occlusion (BAO) and moderate deficit (National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale [NIHSS] score 10-19). ⋯ EVT leads to improved outcomes compared to those with SMT alone. Younger age, absence of diabetes mellitus, higher baseline pc-ASPECTSs, and mTICI score of 2b-3 were associated with better functional outcome in the EVT group.
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Journal of neurosurgery · Oct 2022
How precise is PreSize Neurovascular? Accuracy evaluation of flow diverter deployed-length prediction.
The use of flow-diverting stents has been increasingly important in intracranial aneurysm treatment. However, accurate sizing and landing zone prediction remain challenging. Inaccurate sizing can lead to suboptimal deployment, device waste, and complications. This study presents stent deployment length predictions offered in medical software (PreSize Neurovascular) that provides physicians with real-time planning support, allowing them to preoperatively "test" different devices in the patient's anatomy in a safe virtual environment. This study reports the software evaluation methodology and accuracy results when applied to real-world data from a wide range of cases and sources as a necessary step in demonstrating its reliability, prior to impact assessment in prospective clinical practice. ⋯ The software predicts the deployed stent length with excellent accuracy and could provide physicians with real-time accurate device selection support.
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Journal of neurosurgery · Oct 2022
Evidence-based surveillance protocol for vestibular schwannomas: a long-term analysis of tumor growth using conditional probability.
The growth characteristics of vestibular schwannomas (VSs) under surveillance can be studied using a Bayesian method of growth risk stratification by time after surveillance onset, allowing dynamic evaluations of growth risks. There is no consensus on the optimum surveillance strategy in terms of frequency and duration, particularly for long-term growth risks. In this study, the long-term conditional probability of new VS growth was reported for patients after 5 years of demonstrated nongrowth. This allowed modeling of long-term VS growth risks, the creation of an evidence-based surveillance protocol, and the proposal of a cost-benefit analysis decision aid. ⋯ This multicenter study evaluates the conditional probability of VS growth in patients with long-term VS surveillance (6-10 years). On the basis of these growth risks, the authors posited a surveillance protocol with imaging at 6 months (t = 0.5), annually for 3 years (t = 1.5, 2.5, 3.5), twice at 2-year intervals (t = 5.5, 7.5), and a final scan after 3 years (t = 10.5). This can be used to better inform patients of their risk of growth at particular points along their surveillance timeline, balancing the risk of missing late growth with the costs of repeated imaging. A cost-benefit analysis decision aid was also proposed to allow units to make their own decisions regarding the cessation of surveillance.
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Journal of neurosurgery · Oct 2022
Impact of salvage surgery for recurrent sinonasal cancers with skull base and intracranial involvement.
Patients with recurrent sinonasal cancers (RSNCs) often present with extensive involvement of the skull base and exhibit high rates of subsequent recurrence and death after therapy. The impact of salvage surgery and margin status on progression-free survival (PFS) and overall survival (OS) has yet to be demonstrated. The goal of this study was to determine whether skull base resection with negative margins has an impact on outcomes in the recurrent setting. ⋯ RSNCs show high rates of subsequent disease progression and mortality. This study demonstrated that negative margins may be associated with improved PFS and OS in carefully selected patients who have undergone salvage surgery for RSNC.