Journal of neurosurgery
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Journal of neurosurgery · Jun 1993
Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical TrialA randomized trial of radiotherapy versus radiotherapy plus CCNU for incompletely resected low-grade gliomas: a Southwest Oncology Group study.
Sixty adult patients with incompletely excised low-grade gliomas were randomly assigned to receive radiotherapy (55 Gy over a total of 6 1/2 to 7 weeks) either alone or with 1-(2-chloroethyl)-3-cyclohexyl-1-nitrosourea (CCNU; 100 mg/sq m every 6 weeks). Pathological review showed that six patients were ineligible for the study. Evaluation of patient age, extent of surgery, tumor grade, and performance status showed no significant differences between the treatment arms. ⋯ For the group as a whole, patient age and performance status were the most important prognostic parameters. The majority of patients receiving chemotherapy experienced moderate hematological toxicity. This study demonstrates that CCNU chemotherapy does not improve the results of radiation therapy in the treatment of incompletely excised low-grade gliomas.
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Journal of neurosurgery · Jun 1993
Case ReportsIntraoperative electrocorticography during tumor resection: impact on seizure outcome in patients with gangliogliomas.
Gangliogliomas are indolent neoplasms that are often associated with long-standing intractable seizures. The seizure-free outcome following ganglioglioma resection alone (or "lesionectomy") has been generally favorable, ranging in most series from 50% to 65%. Thus, the value of resection of epileptogenic cortex in addition to tumor with regard to seizure outcome has been the subject of controversy. ⋯ In a subset of four patients, neuropsychological and cognitive function were evaluated pre- and postoperatively. In these four, a clear trend toward improvement was noted in most functions. Thus, resection of epileptogenic cortex along with tumor may improve seizure outcome in selected patients with tumor-associated epilepsy without engendering identifiable neurological or cognitive deficits attributable to the incremental resection.
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Journal of neurosurgery · May 1993
Case ReportsIntractable hiccups: treatment by microvascular decompression of the vagus nerve. Case Report.
Idiopathic hiccups are usually managed with pharyngeal stimulation or a plethora of pharmacological agents. Hiccups that persist and prove intractable to these medical measures are treated by crush or ablation of the phrenic nerve, which denervates the major respiratory muscle. This is the first reported case of nondestructive microvascular decompression of the vagus nerve for the treatment of intractable idiopathic hiccups. ⋯ Once the contact was eliminated by wrapping the artery with a tuft of Teflon, the hiccups stopped. The patient has remained free of hiccups for 3 years. It is concluded that patients with intractable idiopathic hiccups who fail medical therapy should be considered for microvascular decompression of the vagus nerve.
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The objective of this study was to assess the effect of referral bias on survival in patients with subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH). The characteristics of 49 patients with aneurysmal SAH from a single community were compared with those of 328 patients referred from outside the community, all treated in the same medical care setting. In addition, referral patients who received surgery were compared by differential survival analysis with those still awaiting surgery at Days 1 to 3, Days 4 to 10, and Days 11 to 15. ⋯ Patients who underwent early surgical treatment had a 1-year survival rate almost identical to that of patients with late surgery. Referral patients had a better early survival rate than did community patients because the referral group did not include patients who died and some who were in poor clinical condition before the opportunity for referral. The differential survival analysis described provides a new method for estimating survival for treated and untreated patients with SAH.
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Journal of neurosurgery · May 1993
Comparative StudyComparative study of transcranial color duplex sonography and transcranial Doppler sonography in adults.
To determine whether the frequency shift recorded in basal cerebral arteries corresponds to "true" flow velocities, a prospective comparative study of transcranial color duplex sonography (TCCD) and transcranial Doppler sonography (TCD) was performed. A 2.0-MHz transducer of a computerized TCCD system and a TCD device were used. The middle cerebral artery (MCA) and anterior cerebral artery (ACA) were examined by TCCD in 49 healthy volunteers (mean age 35 +/- 12 years). ⋯ In a reproducibility study, TCCD was repeated in 27 subjects by a third examiner with significant correlation (p < 0.0001) of both TCCD examinations. It is concluded that the advantage of TCCD is associated more with a qualitative aspect than a quantitative one. The additional visual dimension of TCCD can open new diagnostic possibilities in cerebrovascular disorders.