Journal of neurosurgery
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Journal of neurosurgery · Dec 2024
Multicenter StudyDerivation of the Quebec Brain Injury Categories for complicated mild traumatic brain injuries.
Approximately 10% of patients with mild traumatic brain injury (TBI) present with intracranial bleeding, and only 3.5% eventually require neurosurgical intervention, which often necessitates interhospital transfer. Better guidelines and recommendations are needed to manage complicated mild TBI in the emergency department (ED). The main objective of this study was to derive a clinical decision rule, the Quebec Brain Injury Categories (QueBIC), to predict the risk of adverse outcomes for complicated mild TBI in the ED. The secondary objective was to compare the QueBIC's performance with those of other existing guidelines. ⋯ QueBIC is a safe and effective tool to guide the management of patients presenting to the ED with complicated mild TBI. It accurately identifies patients at low risk for specialized neurotrauma or neurosurgical care. Further validation is required before its use in EDs.
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Journal of neurosurgery · Dec 2024
Multicenter StudySurgical infarct volume reduction and functional outcomes in patients with ischemic cerebellar stroke: results from a multicentric retrospective study.
Recent work on ischemic cerebellar stroke has suggested that the resection of infarcted tissue may lead to improved functional outcomes compared with decompressive surgery alone. Nonetheless, no studies have assessed the extent to which necrotic tissue should be resected or if there are any volumetric thresholds capable of predicting functional outcomes in this patient population. In this study, the authors aimed to determine potential thresholds for volume reduction in ischemic cerebellar stroke in an effort to optimize the management of ischemic cerebellar stroke and, in so doing, improve functional outcomes. ⋯ The reduction of necrotic tissue volumes by at least 50% and/or the reduction of the infarct volume by ≤ 17 cm3 appear to be associated with favorable outcomes in patients with surgically managed ischemic cerebellar strokes.
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Journal of neurosurgery · Dec 2024
Bevacizumab-IRDye800CW for tumor detection in fluorescence-guided meningioma surgery (LUMINA trial): a single-center phase I study.
Meningiomas are one of the most frequently occurring brain tumors and can be curatively treated with gross-total resection. A subtotal resection increases the chances of recurrence. The intraoperative identification of invisible tumor remnants by using a fluorescent tracer targeting an upregulated biomarker could help to optimize meningioma resection. This is called molecular fluorescence-guided surgery (MFGS). Vascular endothelial growth factor α (VEGFα) has been identified as a suitable meningioma biomarker and can be targeted with bevacizumab-IRDye800CW. ⋯ Bevacizumab-IRDye800CW can be safely used in patients with meningioma; 10 mg bevacizumab-IRDye800CW provided an adequate tumor-to-background ratio. Adjustments of the currently available neurosurgical microscopes are needed to achieve visualization of targeted IRDye800CW intraoperatively. A phase II/III trial is needed to methodically investigate the benefit of MFGS with bevacizumab-IRDye800CW for meningioma surgery in a larger cohort of patients.
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Journal of neurosurgery · Dec 2024
An analysis of potentially avoidable neurosurgical transfers to a tertiary-care level I trauma center.
Previous studies of neurosurgical transfers indicate that substantial numbers of patients may not need to be transferred, suggesting an opportunity to provide more patient-centered care by treating patients in their communities, while probably saving thousands of dollars in transport and duplicative workup. This study of neurosurgical transfers, the largest to date, aimed to better characterize how often transfers were potentially avoidable and which patient factors might affect whether transfer is needed. ⋯ This study demonstrates that a large number of neurosurgical transfers can probably be treated in their home hospitals and highlights that the vast majority of patients transferred for neurosurgical conditions do not receive emergency neurosurgery. Further research is needed to better guide transferring and receiving facilities in reducing the burden of excessive transfers.
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Journal of neurosurgery · Dec 2024
Focal motor weakness and recovery following chronic subdural hematoma evacuation.
The incidence of chronic subdural hematomas (cSDHs) is expected to climb precipitously in the coming decades because of the aging populous. Neurological weakness is one of the most common presenting neurological symptoms of cSDH. Yet, the recovery rates of motor strength recovery are seldom documented, as neurological outcomes have predominantly focused on broader functional assessment scores or mortality. In this study, the authors performed one of the first detailed analyses on functional motor weakness and recovery in patients who underwent cSDH evacuation. ⋯ This study represents one of the first in-depth analyses investigating the rates of motor strength weakness and recovery following cSDH evacuation. Nearly two-thirds of all patients had complete resolution of their weakness by the time of discharge, and more than three-quarters had partial improvement. Risk factors for impaired neurological recovery were longer symptom duration prior to treatment and older age.