Neurosurgery
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Review Case Reports
Surgical treatment of a rare congenital anomaly of the vertebral artery: case report and review of the literature.
A case of an abnormal loop of the vertebral artery compressing both the cervicomedullary junction and the accessory nerve is reported. The embryological development of the vertebrobasilar system may explain this anatomical anomaly. ⋯ The present patient was cured by microvascular decompression. The pathogenetic and surgical implications are discussed in light of the literature.
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Potential prognostic anatomic and hemodynamic factors were evaluated in 248 patients with cerebral arteriovenous malformations (AVMs), all treated by direct microsurgical removal. The size of each AVM was calculated by its volume, obtained by the multiplication of the three AVM diameters by 0.52. A surgical classification of AVM location (in 11 groups) is proposed. ⋯ As for other anatomic factors: a) the presence of deep feeders significantly increased the incidence of hyperemic complications, as well as the morbidity and mortality rate; b) the presence of deep drainage significantly increased permanent morbidity only; c) the extension of the venous system was significantly related to the development of hyperemic complications, and to morbidity and mortality. Transcranial Doppler examination showed that mean flow velocities greater than 120 cm/s in the main feeder were associated with a significantly higher rate of postoperative hematomas and transient deficits. A classification of cerebral AVMs that takes into account AVM volume and location, the type of feeders, the extent of the drainage system, and the main feeder flow velocity is suggested.
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Spinal cord stimulation has been reported to relieve ischemic pain and to enhance peripheral circulation. To elucidate the still unknown mechanisms behind these effects, changes in the peripheral blood flow in the skin of the hind paw after stimulation applied to the dorsal column was studied in the normal rat. A substantial flow increase, monitored by laser Doppler technique, was observed in response to stimulation with an intensity comparable to that used clinically in man, recruiting only low-threshold neuronal elements. ⋯ Stimulation failed to produce an increase in blood flow in addition to that produced by guanethidine and hexamethonium, but high-intensity dorsal column or dorsal root stimulation still was effective. The results indicate that spinal mechanisms are essential and that antidromic activation of primary afferent fibers is unlikely to account for the peripheral vasodilatation induced by low-intensity spinal cord stimulation. Our observations suggest a transitory inhibition of sympathetic vasoconstriction as the principal underlying mechanism.
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Seven cases of vein of Galen aneurysms treated by percutaneous transvenous endovascular occlusion of the aneurysmal vein are presented. In one case, the approach was via the femoral vein, and in the other six cases, by the jugular vein. All of the malformations were multipedicular and, additionally, in six of the seven there was an intervening arterial-arterial network between the posterior thalamoperforating arteries and the wall of the venous aneurysm. ⋯ Measurement of intra-aneurysmal pressure during the course of treatment allowed better understanding of the hemodynamics of the lesions, guided the amount of occlusion to be accomplished during each treatment session, and thus may have prevented the phenomenon of normal perfusion pressure breakthrough. The percutaneous transvenous approach offers all the advantages of the transtorcular approach but avoids surgery. Because of our excellent angiographic and clinical results--five complete and two partial occlusions, with favorable outcomes and no major complications--we believe that this technique is better for the treatment of multipedicular vein of Galen aneurysms than transarterial embolization or surgery.
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Biography Historical Article
Kenneth McKenzie, Harvey Cushing, and the early neurosurgical treatment of spasmodic torticollis.
In 1923, Dr. Kenneth McKenzie trained at the Peter Bent Brigham Hospital under Dr. Harvey Cushing. ⋯ The record includes postoperative drawings of the intraoperative field by Dr. Cushing, a sketch by Dr. McKenzie illustrating the postoperative sensory examination, and pre- and postoperative photographs of the patient.