Neurosurgery
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Craniocerebral gunshot wounds are a significant cause of injury and death in the United States. However, despite reports of occasional unexpectedly favorable outcome in surgically treated patients, these injuries have been viewed pessimistically and indeed have generally been excluded from modern studies of head injuries, which have concentrated on closed head injuries. ⋯ A detailed analysis of these patients, including demographic details, general and neurological condition, anatomic injuries, laboratory findings, surgical care, neurological course, and neurological and functional outcome follows. The helpfulness of early resuscitation and appropriate criteria for surgery need to be studied using historic or randomized controls.
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Clinical Trial
Administration of intraspinal morphine sulfate for the treatment of intractable cancer pain.
A total of 24 patients with intractable cancer pain were evaluated as candidates for spinal morphine therapy. Temporary trials were carried out with bolus injections of preservative-free morphine sulfate via percutaneously inserted epidural catheters. Fourteen patients felt that pain relief was sufficient to warrant long term morphine application, and permanent drug delivery systems were implanted. ⋯ A persistent cerebrospinal fluid fistula developed in 1 patient; this required wound revision. No other serious complications or episodes of respiratory depression occurred. We conclude that intraspinal morphine sulfate is a beneficial treatment option for cancer patients in whom pain has become debilitating and unresponsive to oral or parenteral narcotic regimes.
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Approximately 3 to 4 times a year, a tumor with suprasellar extension escapes classification on high resolution coronal and transaxial computed tomography. When arteriography failed to determine the diagnosis, the differential choices were usually meningioma or pituitary adenoma. The authors report the use of sagittal reformatted images in this differential diagnosis and conclude that these images may aid in the distinction between pituitary tumors with suprasellar extension and meningiomas located in this area.
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Complete gross and microscopic neuropathological examinations of 25 children who died with meningomyelocele, the Arnold-Chiari malformation, and hydrocephalus revealed a wide range and frequency of associated central nervous system malformations. The most remarkable of these anomalies were hypoplasia or aplasia of cranial nerve nuclei (20%), demonstrable obstruction of cerebrospinal fluid flow within the ventricular system (92%), cerebellar dysplasia (72%), a disorder of migration of cortical neurons (92%), fusion of the thalami (16%), agenesis of the corpus callosum (12%), and complete or partial agenesis of the olfactory tract and bulb (8%). The anomalies associated with posterior neural tube closure defects can no longer be considered secondary, but rather must be considered part of a spectrum of malformations caused by an unidentified primary insult to the central nervous system. The frequency and pattern of brain malformations associated with neural tube defects of some children with meningomyelocele suggest that such malformations may seriously affect intellectual outcome.
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The extent of treatment for the victims of gunshot wounds to the brain remains quite controversial, particularly when these patients present with extensive neurological dysfunction. We propose guidelines regarding the degree and aggressiveness of therapy. The factors that seem to have a significant impact on the patient's final outcome are the neurological examination at the time of admission, the radiological findings, and the motivation for the shooting. Thus, the authors propose a nonsurgical line of therapy for comatose patients with unilateral or bilateral cerebral gunshot wounds where bone or metal fragments are visualized away from the bullet path on computed tomography scan, particularly when these individuals are suicide victims.