World Neurosurg
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To present midterm to long-term results obtained in carpal tunnel release, in situ decompression, and anterior transposition of the ulnar nerve using the retractor integrated endoscope. ⋯ The retractor-endoscopic technique provides good long-term results after carpal tunnel release, in situ decompression, and anterior subcutaneous transposition of the ulnar nerve. Outcomes showed some correlation to the duration of preoperative symptoms.
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Review Case Reports
The science of medical decision making: neurosurgery, errors, and personal cognitive strategies for improving quality of care.
During the last 2 decades, there has been a shift in the U. S. health care system towards improving the quality of health care provided by enhancing patient safety and reducing medical errors. Unfortunately, surgical complications, patient harm events, and malpractice claims remain common in the field of neurosurgery. ⋯ There are an increasing number of publications in the medical literature in which authors address cognitive errors in diagnosis and treatment and strategies for reducing such errors, but these are for the most part absent in the neurosurgical literature. The purpose of this article is to highlight the complexities of medical decision making to a neurosurgical audience, with the hope of providing insight into the biases that lead us towards error and strategies to overcome our innate cognitive deficiencies. To accomplish this goal, we review the current literature on medical errors and just culture, explain the dual process theory of cognition, identify common cognitive errors affecting neurosurgeons in practice, review cognitive debiasing strategies, and finally provide simple methods that can be easily assimilated into neurosurgical practice to improve clinical decision making.
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Case Reports
A rare case of recurrent frontal osteoma complicated by mucopyocele with an unusual organism, Moraxella catarrhalis.
We report a rare case of recurrent frontal osteoma complicated by mucopyocele and intracranial abscess. Furthermore, we report an unusual organism, Moraxella catarrhalis, as the infectious agent. Finally, we demonstrate that endovascular embolization may be part of the treatment paradigm of frontal osteomas in selected cases. ⋯ Synchronous presentation of a frontal osteoma with mucopyocele is a rare event. However, the case of a recurrent osteoma complicated by infection with M. catarrhalis has not been reported in the literature, nor a treatment paradigm that included preoperative partial endovascular embolization.
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Biography Historical Article
The Clinic of Neurosurgery at the Clinical Center of Serbia in Belgrade--building on the past.
Neurosurgery as an independent discipline in Serbia has a distinguished history, beginning in 1938 when Dr. Milivoje Kostic, Professor and Chairman of Surgery, opened the Department of Neurosurgery within the Clinic of Surgery in Belgrade. Since then, thanks to the founding fathers' efforts and their successors' work, the Clinic for Neurosurgery in Belgrade has become a highly specialized health, scientific, and educational institution that is part of the University of Belgrade and is a referral center for all neurosurgical clinics in Serbia. ⋯ Each year, there are more than 3000 admissions at the neurosurgical service. Approximately 3500 operations per year are performed in the main campus neurosurgical operating rooms of CCS, while approximately 15,000 patients alone are evaluated in emergency room or inpatient consultations. Despite economic restraints, the department continues to grow in strength, and we remain optimistic of exciting times ahead for neurosurgery at the CCS.
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Case Reports
Surgical decompression for optic neuropathy from carotid artery ectasia: case report with technical considerations.
Symptomatic compression of the optic nerve (ON) through its intracranial course or within the orbit may occur at several locations by abnormalities of adjacent soft tissue, bony, or vascular structures. Compressive optic neuropathy secondary to vascular ectasia is a rare phenomenon. ⋯ We present a patient with severe monocular visual loss and significant anatomic displacement of the ON by an ectatic internal carotid artery-ophthalmic artery complex with dramatic and rapid visual improvement after surgical decompression. Complete untethering of the nerve and total cessation of transmitted pulsatility may not be necessary for symptomatic improvement. Optic nerve contact or displacement by the ipsilateral carotid artery is common in asymptomatic patients, therefore ruling out other etiologies of monocular visual loss before surgical decompression is paramount.