Neurosurgery
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The effect of a 2 g/kg intravenous bolus of mannitol on intracranial pressure (ICP) and white matter water content was determined by following the time course of ICP and spatial white matter water content after administration of mannitol in a hemispheric cold lesion model of vasogenic edema in the cat. After mannitol infusion, maximal ICP reduction occurred at approximately 20 minutes and began to return to baseline after 26 minutes. ⋯ White matter water content in the lesioned hemisphere was not changed significantly after mannitol infusion. We conclude that the rapid reduction of ICP after intravenous administration of mannitol is not solely due to the dehydration of white matter.
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We evaluated the treatment outcome of 17 patients with anaplastic oligodendroglioma and 17 patients with anaplastic mixed oligodendroglioma-astrocytoma. In the anaplastic oligodendroglioma group, eight patients were treated at the time of the initial admission with radiotherapy and adjuvant chemotherapy, and nine patients were treated at the time of recurrence with salvage chemotherapy. Three patients for whom adjuvant chemotherapy was not successful were also treated with chemotherapy at the time of recurrence. ⋯ The initial treatment resulted in two complete responses, three partial responses, and seven stable disease (response and stable disease, 100%), with most responses lasting longer than 12 months. The treatment of the patients with recurrent disease resulted in one partial response and five stable disease (response and stable disease, 100%), with a median time to progression of 6 months. These results suggest that aggressive treatment is beneficial for recurrent anaplastic oligodendrogliomas and mixed gliomas as well as initial mixed gliomas but may offer only minimal advantage over conventional radiotherapy for the initial treatment of anaplastic oligodendrogliomas.
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The authors present the history of a patient with a Chiari I malformation "acquired" after multiple traumatic lumbar punctures. The genesis of tonsillar descent is believed to be related to persistent leakage of cerebrospinal fluid secondary to the multiple traumatic lumbar punctures. The topic of acquired Chiari I malformations and complications of lumbar puncture is reviewed.
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Forty-two patients underwent cerebral aneurysm clipping at our institution in 1991, 35 with a ruptured aneurysm and 7 with an unruptured aneurysm. Preoperatively, 22 patients with a ruptured aneurysm were graded I or II according to the World Federation of Neurosurgical Societies and 21 underwent an operation on the first day. All underwent a standard cerebral protective general anesthesia, combining propofol with fentanyl, arterial normotension (mild hypertension with volume loading and/or dopamine during temporary clipping and once the aneurysm was secured), normocarbia or slight hypocarbia, brain relaxation with lumbar drainage, mannitol and propofol, and electroencephalogram burst suppression when temporary clipping (> or = 2 min) was required. ⋯ In 21 patients, temporary clipping was required for a mean duration of 8.8 +/- 1.3 minutes (range, 2-29); none of these patients deteriorated as compared with their preoperative neurological state. Twenty-four of the 42 patients (57%) had a Glasgow Coma Outcome Scale (GOS) score of 1, 7 patients had a GOS score of 2, 8 had a score of 3, and 3 had a score of 5. Thirty-two patients were extubated in the operating room with a mean GOS Score of 13.2 +/- 0.5, and 10 were extubated later in the intensive care unit.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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During 22 operations in 18 patients, we stimulated the ocular motor nerves electrically, intracranially, and recorded compound muscle action potentials (CMAP) directly from the extraocular muscles with a ring electrode that we developed. Recording electrodes were applied in 52 instances to the superior rectus, medial rectus, superior oblique, or lateral rectus muscle and to the levator palpebrae superioris in 2 instances; CMAP were recorded successfully from 22 muscles. Evoked CMAP were not recorded in 2 instances because of problems with recording equipment; in the remaining 30 instances, no evoked CMAP were recorded because 1) the oculomotor or abducens nerve was not exposed during the operation; or 2) the recording electrode on the superior oblique muscle had not been properly placed to record trochlear nerve CMAP. ⋯ Monitoring results also confirmed the surgeons' visual findings, thus helping the surgeons operate with greater confidence. Further, intraoperative monitoring provided us with some insights into the pathophysiology of ocular motor nerve dysfunction caused by skull base lesions; we documented electrophysiologically the occurrence of the slowing of conduction in the ocular motor nerves. We conclude that monitoring ocular motor nerve CMAP can reduce the incidence of surgical complications such as functional blindness due to inadvertent sectioning of one of these nerves and that it would be worthwhile to conduct studies of this technique in many more cases to validate our findings.