Journal of neurosurgery
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Journal of neurosurgery · Feb 1984
Significance of contrast enhancement in cranial computerized tomography after subarachnoid hemorrhage.
Eighty patients with subarachnoid hemorrhage underwent computerized tomography (CT) scanning before and after administration of Conray contrast medium. Abnormal enhancement was seen in visual evaluation of the CT scans in 26 cases, in the regions bordering the subarachnoid spaces. ⋯ Measurements of absorption values in the thalamus revealed significant increases in density after contrast enhancement in those patients whose scans showed abnormal enhancement in the regions bordering the subarachnoid spaces on visual evaluation. The authors suggest that the abnormal enhancement is parenchymal, in the gyri, and is not "subarachnoid." They suggest that it is due to gyral hyperemia or extravasation of contrast material into the cortex resulting from breakdown of the blood-brain barrier, or a combination of both factors.
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Journal of neurosurgery · Feb 1984
Case ReportsSubarachnoid hemorrhage from intracranial dissecting aneurysm.
Rupture of an intracranial dissecting aneurysm is a rare but dangerous event. The authors' experience with 14 cases of these lesions on the vertebrobasilar circulation suggests that these aneurysms have typical angiographic silhouettes and that, at least in the vertebral artery, they are treatable by proximal arterial occlusion.
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Journal of neurosurgery · Jan 1984
Case ReportsCarotid to distal vertebral artery bypass for vertebrobasilar ischemia. Case report.
A simple technique is described for a venous graft between the common carotid artery and the extracranial vertebral artery. In the case described, the vertebral artery was shown angiographically to be occluded and reconstituted by collateral vessels. This patient had symptoms of vertebrobasilar insufficiency which resolved postoperatively.
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Journal of neurosurgery · Jan 1984
Brachytherapy of recurrent malignant brain tumors with removable high-activity iodine-125 sources.
Thirty-seven patients harboring recurrent malignant primary or metastatic brain tumors were treated by 40 implantations of high-activity iodine-125 (125I) sources. All patients had been treated with irradiation and most had been treated with chemotherapeutic agents, primarily nitrosoureas. Implantations were performed using computerized tomography (CT)-directed stereotaxy; 125I sources were held in one or more afterloaded catheters that were removed after the desired dose (minimum tumor dose of 3000 to 12,000 rads) had been delivered. ⋯ All improved after resection of the focal necrotic mass and are still alive 10, 15, 19, 24, and 25 months after the initial implantation procedure; only one patient has evidence of tumor regrowth. The median follow-up period after implantation for the malignant glioma (anaplastic astrocytoma and glioblastoma multiforme) group is 9 months, with 48% of patients still surviving. While direct comparison with the results of chemotherapy is difficult, results obtained in this patient group with interstitial brachytherapy are probably superior to results obtained with chemotherapy.
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The recurrent arteries of Heubner were studied in 30 unfixed human brains (60 hemispheres) obtained from routine autopsies of individuals with a mean age of 34 years. The arteries were injected with tinted polyester resin via cannulation of the internal carotid arteries, and dissected under microscopic magnification. The recurrent artery of Heubner was absent in two hemispheres and double in seven hemispheres, either with a separate origin (in two) or from a common stem (in five). ⋯ The point of penetration of the main trunk was found to be constant at the level of the lateral perforated substance-medial Sylvian fissure in 85% of the cases. This report emphasizes the advantages of the intravascular casting resin injection technique in unfixed human brains over other conventional methods. It also describes the application of these anatomic data to the surgical strategy for the anterior circle of Willis, including the possible use of the recurrent artery of Heubner for microvascular reconstructive procedures.