Neurosurgery
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Symptomatic pineal cysts are rare and typically managed with an open surgical approach. We report the successful treatment of a symptomatic pineal cyst using a stereotactic endoscopic technique.
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The long-term use of anticonvulsant medication to prevent postoperative seizures in patients with aneurysms has been accepted medical practice for many years. The low incidence of seizures in more recent aneurysm series makes it appropriate to re-evaluate the use of prophylactic anticonvulsants to prevent postoperative epilepsy, especially in patients at low risk of seizure disorders. On the basis of preoperative presentation, we categorized 387 of the 420 craniotomies for aneurysms over a 4-year period to be at low risk of seizure. ⋯ Early and long-term seizure rates for unruptured aneurysms were 2.6 and 4.4%, respectively. No patients who had early seizures went on to develop epilepsy, and all seizure disorders were well controlled once anticonvulsants were begun. These data support the idea that anticonvulsant medication may be safely restricted to the immediate perioperative period for most patients with aneurysms.
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INTRAOPERATIVE MONITORING OF motor evoked potentials (MEPs) may become a valuable test of spinal cord function during surgery. Unfortunately, MEP responses are affected by most common anesthetics. We studied the effect of intravenous propofol on transcranial magnetic MEPs (tcMMEPs) in the rat. ⋯ Infusion tcMMEPs displayed increased onset latencies but demonstrated a significant change in amplitudes only after the largest infusion dose. The MEPs approached baseline levels after discontinuation of the propofol. This study demonstrates that tcMMEPs can be successfully recorded from the rat during propofol anesthesia.
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Review Comparative Study
Surgical indication and results of foramen magnum decompression versus syringosubarachnoid shunting for syringomyelia associated with Chiari I malformation.
Several surgical procedures have been used for the treatment of syringomyelia associated with Chiari I malformation at our institute. The purpose of this article is to evaluate the results of two major surgical procedures, foramen magnum decompression (FMD) and syringosubarachnoid (SS) shunting. The series consisted of 70 patients with syringomyelia associated with Chiari I malformation who were surgically treated. ⋯ In particular, the relief of pain was more fully achieved after SS shunting than after FMD. The average time for the syrinx to collapse was 6.3 weeks after surgery in the FMD group and 1.8 weeks in the SS shunting group. These results indicate that clinical symptoms and radiological findings improved much more quickly in the SS shunting group than in the FMD group.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)