Neurosurgery
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To determine the effect of Neuroform stent (Boston Scientific/Target, Fremont, CA) deployment on parent vessel lumen and detect in-stent changes in patients harboring wide-necked intracranial aneurysms treated with the stent-coil technique. ⋯ Intracranial stenting using a soft self-expanding stent without angioplasty induced a statistically, but not clinically, significant decrease in cross sectional area. Further research and longer-term follow-up are needed to elucidate the mechanism and clinical importance of this response.
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The objective of this study was to assess the collateral circulation and blood flow velocity in arteries forming collateral circulation in patients with cerebral aneurysms and the occlusion of the brachiocephalic vessels. ⋯ Occlusion of the brachiocephalic vessels leads to formation of collateral circulation through the circle of Willis and the extracranial collaterals connecting the external and internal carotid arteries. An increase in blood flow velocity is commonly observed in intracranial arteries forming a collateral pathways. In some cases, not excluding arteries with a cerebral aneurysm, the increase in blood flow velocity is insignificant or none at all. This study shows that formation of a cerebral aneurysm is not always related to an increase in the flow velocity of collateral arteries.
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There are few large-volume studies of the repair of complete missile-caused peroneal nerve and peroneal division lesions. In this prospective study, the outcomes of such repairs are studied and the factors influencing the outcomes are analyzed. ⋯ After peroneal nerve or peroneal division repairs, a successful outcome is most probable with low-level lesions repaired in the first 3 months after injury using grafts smaller than 4 cm. Conversely, high-level repairs delayed for more than 7 months after injury and using grafts larger than 8 cm are probably not worthwhile.
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Pulsatile tinnitus is characterized by hearing the heart beat or respiration in one or both ears. In 15% of patients with pulsatile tinnitus, no cause can be found. Other investigators have suggested that a vascular loop entering the internal auditory meatus can be another cause of arterial, pulse synchronous tinnitus. If so, we should constantly hear the arterial pulsations of the carotid arteries passing through the petrous bone. ⋯ Vascular loops in the internal auditory canal may generate pulsatile tinnitus. It may be treated by placing Teflon between the cochlea and the intrameatal vascular loop. One then does not hear the pulsation of the carotids due to a dampening effect of a pericarotid venous plexus.
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Case Reports
Isolated abducent nerve palsy after microvascular decompression for trigeminal neuralgia: case report.
Microvascular decompression (MVD) is a safe and effective treatment for trigeminal neuralgia. Isolated postoperative ipsilateral abducent nerve palsy is an extremely rare complication of this procedure and has not been reported before. The author wishes to report this rare complication, discuss its aetio-pathogenesis and the natural course. ⋯ Isolated abducent nerve damage is a rare complication of the MVD procedure. Surgical manipulation of the dilated and tortuous vessels located anterior to the trigeminal nerve may cause indirect stretching of the delicate abducent nerve with resultant neuropraxia. This complication is difficult to recognize and prevent intra-operatively as the nerve lies on the far side of the artery. Fortunately, spontaneous recovery of the neural function seems to be the most likely outcome.