Journal of neurosurgery
-
Journal of neurosurgery · Nov 2023
A long-term study of posterior circulation changes after revascularization in patients with moyamoya disease.
This study aimed to explore the long-term course of posterior circulation changes and predictors in patients with moyamoya disease (MMD). ⋯ Progression of PCA stenosis is common in patients with MMD, even if the PCA is normal initially. Mutations of RNF213 p.R4810K may predict PCA involvement or progression. Follow-up of the PCA in MMD patients should be conducted, and timely surgical revascularization is needed.
-
Journal of neurosurgery · Nov 2023
Predictors of extent of resection and recurrence following endoscopic endonasal resection of craniopharyngioma.
Craniopharyngioma is a benign but surgically challenging brain tumor. Controversies exist regarding its ideal treatment strategy, goals of surgery, efficacy of radiation, and the long-term outcomes of these decisions. The authors of this study performed a detailed analysis of factors predictive of the extent of resection and recurrence in large series of craniopharyngiomas removed via an endoscopic endonasal approach (EEA) with long-term follow-up. ⋯ The study data show that GTR should be the goal of surgery in craniopharyngiomas if it can be achieved safely. Although stalk preservation can maintain some endocrine function, the risk of recurrence is higher in such cases. Radiation may not be as effective as previously reported.
-
Journal of neurosurgery · Nov 2023
Cytodifferentiation of pituitary tumors influences pathogenesis and cavernous sinus invasion.
Pituitary tumors (PTs) continue to present unique challenges given their proximity to the cavernous sinus, whereby invasive behavior can limit the extent of resection and surgical outcome, especially in functional tumors. The aim of this study was to elucidate patterns of cavernoinvasive behavior by PT subtype. ⋯ The likelihood of CSI differed by transcription factor expression; PIT-1-expressing tumors had a higher predilection for invading the cavernous sinus, particularly microscopically, compared with the other tumor subtypes. This elucidates a unique cavernoinvasive behavior absent in cells from other lineages. Innovative surgical techniques, however, can mitigate tumor behavior and achieve robust, reproducible biochemical remission and gross-total resection rates. These findings can have considerable implications on the surgical management and study of PT biology and behavior.
-
Journal of neurosurgery · Nov 2023
Anton de Haen (1704-1776) and his extraordinary "portentosum infundibulum" case: the futile skull cauterization of a blind patient with a craniopharyngioma.
Anton de Haen (1704-1776) became one of the most influential physicians in the Habsburg Empire as a reformer of clinical instruction at Vienna Citizen's Hospital (Bürgerspital), where he introduced the bedside teaching method he had learned from Herman Boerhaave in Leyden, Holland. He also promoted the meticulous recording of clinical observations and the use of postmortem studies to identify the cause of death in hospitalized patients. Among the numerous clinicopathological reports compiled in his monumental 18-volume work Rationis Medendi in Nosocomio Practico, published in 1761, was the first documented patient with amenorrhea caused by a pituitary tumor, appearing in the 6th volume. ⋯ At the autopsy, a large solid-cystic and calcified tumor with gross characteristics typical of adamantinomatous craniopharyngioma was found encroaching on the infundibulum and third ventricle. This is the first known account of an infundibulo-tuberal lesion associated with the impairment of sexual functions, predating by 140 years the pathological evidence for a sexual brain center sited at the basal hypothalamus. In this paper, the authors analyze the historical importance and impact of de Haen's foundational report on the fields of neuroendocrinology and neurosurgery.
-
Journal of neurosurgery · Nov 2023
Axonal mapping of motor and sensory components within the ulnar nerve and its branches.
Intrinsic function is indispensable for dexterous hand movements. Distal ulnar nerve defects can result in intrinsic muscle dysfunction and sensory deficits. Although the ulnar nerve's fascicular anatomy has been extensively studied, quantitative and topographic data on motor axons traveling within this nerve remain elusive. ⋯ Knowledge of the detailed axonal architecture of the motor and sensory components of the human ulnar nerve is of the utmost importance for surgeons considering fascicular grafting or nerve transfer surgery. The low number of efferent axons in motor branches of the ulnar nerve and their distinct topographical distribution along the distal course of the nerve is indispensable information for modern nerve surgery.