World Neurosurg
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Transseptal puncture has been widely used by cardiologists to reach the left side of the heart through a transvenous access. Rarely, it also can be used to pass into the supra-aortic arteries from the venous side when conventional transarterial access pathways (transfemoral, transradial/brachial routes, or direct carotid puncture) are likely to fail. ⋯ Transvenous-transseptal access enabled treatment of both cases easily and without complications. On follow-up computed tomography angiograms, both flow diverters were patent, there were no residual aneurysms, and no neurologic or cardiac adverse events in either patient.
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Surgical resection is considered to be the treatment of choice for carotid body tumors. However, surgery can be complicated by intraoperative bleeding, injury to the internal carotid artery, and cerebral ischemia. Consequently, preoperative endovascular strategies including transarterial or percutaneous embolization or covered carotid stenting may be used. ⋯ The patient underwent surgical resection 8 weeks later. The patient recovered from the procedures without any complications. Informed consent for the procedure and publication was obtained.
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In thoracolumbar spinal instrumentation surgery, pedicle screw fixation is widely used, whereas screw loosening occurs only occasionally over time. It is common to evaluate screw loosening by the radiographic lucent zone around screws, which can neither evaluate loosening quantitatively nor detect slight screw loosening. In the present technical note, we describe a novel assessment technique of screw loosening by generating 3-dimensional screw images from computed tomography data and superposing them in time series. ⋯ This technique enables the quantitative evaluation of screw loosening and loosening between screws and rods. In conjunction with conventional methods of assessing radiographic lucent zone, we are able to obtain more accurate information regarding screw loosening after spinal instrumentation surgery.
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Cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) fistulas are among the most clinically important and frequent complications of transsphenoidal surgery for pituitary adenomas. Between the adenoma and the CSF, a "barrier" exists that consists of ≤3 elements. These, from cephalad to caudad, are the arachnoid, dura mater (sellar diaphragm), and pituitary glandular tissue. The objective of the present study was to determine whether the presence or absence of any of these 3 anatomical elements would be associated with the development of an intraoperative CSF fistula. ⋯ The anatomical architecture forming the roof of the pituitary fossa is an important determinant of intraoperative CSF fistula risk. When the barrier consists of only the arachnoid, the risk will be significantly greater than when the barrier contains additional elements. Preoperative magnetic resonance imaging would be useful to determine the type of the existing barrier.
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We studied the accuracy of the radiologic diagnosis of lateral ventricular masses in children (<20 years of age). ⋯ The pathologic spectrum of lateral ventricular tumors in children is wide, and identifying the pathology on imaging is difficult for malignant tumors. Benign tumors such as SEGAs, low-grade astrocytomas, and choroid plexus papillomas are relatively easier to diagnose. There is significant interobserver variability in the radiologic diagnosis of these tumors.