Neurosurgery
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In adults with ischemic moyamoya disease (MMD), the efficacy of direct vs indirect revascularization procedures remains a matter of debate. ⋯ There was no difference in early postoperative events, long-term infarction or hemorrhage, or clinical outcome between direct and indirect revascularization. However, there was a significant decrease in all ischemic and hemorrhagic events combined in direct revascularizations compared to indirect revascularizations.
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Observational Study
Adverse Events in Neurosurgery: The Novel Therapy-Disability-Neurology Grade.
The most widely used classifications of adverse events (AEs) in neurosurgery define their severity according to the therapy used to treat them. This concept has substantial shortcomings because it does not reflect the severity of AEs that are not treated, such as new neurological deficits. ⋯ Our results suggest that the TDN grade is consistent with clinical and economic repercussions of AE and thus reflects AE severity. It is easily interpreted and enables comparison between different medical centers. The standardized report of the severity of AE in the scientific literature could constitute an important step forward toward a more critical, patient-centered, and evidence-based decision-making in neurosurgery.
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Ruptured intracranial aneurysms cause 50% of spontaneous subarachnoid hemorrhages in children, resulting in up to 65% mortality when left untreated. Although flow-diverting stents are especially suited to treat the fusiform and giant aneurysms more commonly found in children, the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has only approved their use in patients ≥22 years of age. Our objective was to assess the safety of flow-diverting stents in the treatment of pediatric patients with aneurysms through a systematic literature review using the PRISMA criteria. ⋯ This resulted in an incidence rate of 0.018 complications per patient at-risk month (95% CI 0.008-0.035). These data suggest that the use of flow-diverting stents for treatment of aneurysms in children may be safe and that FDA approval for this use should be evaluated. Although this analysis is comprised of case reports and case series, it represents the best attempt thus far to quantify the risk of using flow-diverting stents in children.
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Although recurrence and de novo formation of arteriovenous malformations (AVMs) have been reported following complete resection, the occurrence of hemorrhage in the same location of an AVM with no detectable lesion (lesion-negative hemorrhage) has not been described after microsurgery. ⋯ A lesion-negative hemorrhage can occur following complete microsurgical resection in up to 2.4% of patients. Exploration of possible underlying causes is warranted.
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The behavior of meningiomas under influence of progestin therapy remains unclear. ⋯ Ninety-one percent of intracranial meningiomas in female patients with long-term PCA use decrease or stabilize on MRI after stopping PCA treatment. Meningioma growth kinetics change significantly from growth during PCA usage to shrinkage after PCA withdrawal.