Neurosurgery
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In this prospective study, a series of 89 patients with subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH), most of whom had a "good" neurological outcome, were assessed with a range of tests of memory and cognition as inpatients and at 10 weeks and 12 months after SAH. On tests of verbal cognition and memory, most patients had scores in the normal range 12 months after SAH. However, a significant number of patients still showed impairment on tests of visuospatial construction and memory, mental flexibility, and psychomotor speed at the 12-month assessment. ⋯ The grade at discharge proved to be the best predictor of impairment of cognition and memory at both follow-up assessments. Older subjects did not recover to the same extent as younger subjects by the 12-month assessment. The authors conclude that the diffuse effects of SAH are more important than focal neuropathology in relation to cognitive impairment in this group of patients.
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Microsurgical resection is the primary management approach for patients with intracranial schwannomas. Recent studies have demonstrated that stereotactic radiosurgery is an effective therapeutic modality for patients with acoustic schwannomas. To define the role of radiosurgery in the management of patients with nonacoustic schwannomas, we reviewed the results of gamma unit stereotactic radiosurgery in six patients with trigeminal and five patients with jugular foramen region schwannomas. ⋯ No new cranial nerve or brain stem deficits were noted in either patient group after radiosurgery. In this early experience, radiosurgery proved an effective primary or adjuvant technique for selected patients with schwannomas of the trigeminal, glossopharyngeal, or vagus nerves. Using our described method, the safety of radiosurgery was demonstrated on the brain stem, regional cranial nerves, and especially those cranial nerves intimately associated with the tumor.
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Spinal cord evoked potentials (SCEPs) after spinal cord stimulation were used as a method of spinal cord monitoring during surgery of 6 extramedullary and 14 intramedullary spinal cord tumors. SCEPs were recorded from an epidural electrode placed rostral to the level of the tumor. Electrical stimulation was applied on the dorsal spinal cord from a caudally placed epidural electrode. ⋯ The position of the stimulating electrode, the difference in thresholds of the axons for electrical stimulation between the right and left side of the spinal cord, or the change of the distance between the electrode and the spinal cord surface may account for these false results. Thus, our analysis of the changes of SCEP wave forms and early postoperative symptoms indicates that the sensitivity of this monitoring method to detect intraoperative insults to the spinal cord is unsatisfactory in spite of the reproducible wave forms. We conclude that SCEP monitoring can be used as an alternative method or in combination with other types of evoked potentials in patients with severe spinal cord lesions who show abnormal somatosensory evoked potentials preoperatively.
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Review Case Reports
Metastasis of malignant struma ovarii to the cranial vault during pregnancy.
Malignant struma ovarii is a rare type of ovarian teratoma; only 16 cases with distant metastases have been reported previously. We report an extremely rare case of malignant struma ovarii metastatic to the cranial vault, which developed during pregnancy. A 28-year-old woman in the 26th week of pregnancy, who had undergone resection of an ovarian tumor 3 years previously, noticed a mass in her left frontal region that had enlarged gradually in 6 months. ⋯ Pathological examination showed that the tumor was a follicular adenocarcinoma. Because there was no abnormality in the patient's thyroid gland, this tumor was considered to be a metastasis from the ovarian tumor, a malignant struma ovarii, resected 3 years previously. The management of brain tumor during pregnancy is also discussed.