World Neurosurg
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Review
Cerebral Microdialysis as a Tool for Assessing the Delivery of Chemotherapy in Brain Tumor Patients.
The development of curative treatment for glioblastoma has been extremely challenging. Chemotherapeutic agents that have seemed promising have failed in clinical trials. Drugs that can successfully target cancer cells within the brain must first traverse the brain interstitial fluid. ⋯ This can be expected to change soon because of advances in microminiaturization. CMD is an extremely valuable, yet underused, technique. Future CMD applications will have central importance in assessing drug delivery to tumor cells in vivo, allowing a pathway to successful therapy for malignant brain tumors.
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The objective of this review was to understand the clinical utilization, utility, and variability in the usage of adjunctive hyperbaric oxygen therapy (HBOT). Surgical site infection is associated with high morbidity and mortality, increased health care expenditure, and decreased quality of life. With the increasing prevalence of adult spinal deformity and spinal fusion surgery, it is imperative to understand the potential benefits of adjunctive treatments. ⋯ The most common treatment protocol consists of 90-minute sessions of 100% Fio2 at 2-3 atmosphere absolute with a mean of 35.3 ± 11.6 sessions for 5.2 ± 1.4 weeks. Adjunctive HBOT should be considered in select high-risk patients. Further improvements in diagnosis and categorization of spinal infections are necessary and will indelibly aid the decision making for the initiation of HBOT.
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There have been numerous technical advancements in the field of endoscopic spine surgery since it began in the 1980s and its use further expanded in the 1990s. At present, there are many newer technical advancements in this field, each trying to expand the indications and afford more accurate execution of this procedure. We predict some technologies which can be classified as being disruptive and have the potential of being game changers in this exciting field in the near future.
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Review Case Reports
Atypical Course of Vertebral Artery Outside the Cervical Spine: Case Report and Review of the Literature.
The vertebral arteries are branches of the subclavian arteries supply blood to the posterior part of the encephalon, forming vertebrobasilar circulation. Disorders of vertebrobasilar circulation have significant clinical implications. Symptoms of these disorders include dizziness, vomiting, collapse, vision and cerebellar disorders. The vertebral artery usually ascends in the transverse foramina of the cervical vertebrae to reach the posterior cranial cavity by entering the magnum foramen. Although most often the vertebral artery enters the C6 transverse process, anatomic variation may occur. ⋯ Variability of the vertebral arteries may have clinical implications, and knowledge of its topography is important for mechanism of vertebrobasilar circulatory disorder understanding and for surgical approach to the cervical spine and neck anatomic structures.
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Review Case Reports
Slow-Growing Pituitary Metastasis from Renal Cell Carcinoma: Literature Review.
Tumor metastasis to the pituitary is rare, most commonly reported with either breast or lung cancer metastasizing to the neurohypophysis. Pituitary metastases of renal cell carcinoma (RCC) are by contrast infrequently described even within this scarce literature. We present an illustrative case of RCC pituitary metastasis 15 years after radical nephrectomy for primary disease and a review of the published literature. ⋯ We highlight the potential for delayed metastasis to the pituitary to masquerade as a macroadenoma. Imaging consistent with rich vascularity should bring the diagnosis of RCC metastasis into the differential and is important to note when planning surgical resection in such cases.