Harmonreynolds9628
on is a viable option.
Penetrating gunshot wounds of the spine are common and can cause severe neurological deficits. HG6-64-1 However, there are no guidelines as to their optimal treatment. Here, we present a penetrating injury to the lower thoracic spine at the T12 level that lodged within the canal at L1, resulting in a cauda equina syndrome. Notably, the patient's deficit resolved following bullet removal.
A 29-year-old male sustained a gunshot injury. The bullet entered the right lower chest, went through the liver, entered the spinal canal at T12, fractured the right T12/L1 facet, and settled within the canal at the L1 level. The patient presented with severe burning pain in the right leg, and perineum. On exam, he had right-sided moderate weakness of the iliopsoas and quadriceps femoris muscles, a right-sided foot drop, decreased sensation throughout the right leg, and urinary retention. Computed tomography myelography showed the bullet located intrathecally at the L1 level causing compression of the cauda equina. The patient underwent an L1 laminectomy with durotomy for bullet removal. Immediately postoperatively, the patient improved; motor power returned to normal, the sensory exam significantly improved; and he was left with only mild residual numbness and burning pain in the right leg.
With gunshot injuries, there is a direct correlation between the location/severity of the neurological injury and the potential for recovery. In patients with incomplete cauda equina syndromes, bullet extraction may prove beneficial to neurological outcomes.
With gunshot injuries, there is a direct correlation between the location/severity of the neurological injury and the potential for recovery. In patients with incomplete cauda equina syndromes, bullet extraction may prove beneficial to neurological outcomes.
Evaluation of readmission rates as a proxy metric of health-care quality in neurological surgery has grown to become a prevalent area of investigation in the last several years. Significant attention has been paid to 30-day readmission rates due to the financial incentive to health-care providers following the enforcement of the penalties created by the Affordable Care Act. However, relatively little attention has been paid to patients readmitted within 7 days of discharge to large quaternary neurological surgery services. This study was conducted to examine the causes and unique characteristics of 7-day readmission rates from a neurosurgical service at a large quaternary referral hospital.
A retrospective observational analysis of all 7-day readmissions to the neurosurgical surgery service of the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center, Presbyterian Hospital from August 2017 to June 2019, was performed. Patients were organized into seven categories based on their primary reason for readmission scheduled this acutely vulnerable yet previously overlooked population may guide focused efforts to increase the quality of neurosurgical patient care.
Cauda equina syndromes (CESs) due to leptomeningeal metastases from primitive lung tumors are rare. Despite recent advancements in neuro-oncology and molecular biology, the prognosis for these patients remains poor. Here, we present a case in which a patient developed lumbar leptomeningeal metastases from lung carcinoma that contributed to a CES and reviewed the appropriate literature.
A 55-year-old female presented with the left lower extremity sciatica/weakness. link2 Two years ago, a then 53-year-old female had received Gamma Knife stereotactic radiosurgery (SRS) for a cerebellopontine angle schwannoma. Recently, she underwent resection of lung carcinoma and SRS for a right hemispheric cerebellar metastasis. Now at age 55, she presented with the left lower extremity sciatica/weakness. When her new lumbar MR was interpreted as showing a L5 schwannoma, a L4-L5 laminectomy was performed at surgery, the authors encountered multifocal leptomeningeal metastases densely infiltrating the cauda equina. Although only subtotal resection/decompression of tumor was feasible, she did well for the ensuing year. The histological diagnosis confirmed the lesion to be a poorly differentiated lung adenocarcinoma.
Patients with a history of prior metastatic lung cancer may present with spinal leptomeningeal metastases resulting in a CES.
Patients with a history of prior metastatic lung cancer may present with spinal leptomeningeal metastases resulting in a CES.
The assessment of the clipped cerebral aneurysm and the cerebral arteries after the treatment of subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH) is important to find aneurysm regrowth or postoperative cerebral vasospasm. Usually, contrast-enhanced computed tomography angiography is performed for the evaluation of the arteries, but it has side effects of contrast medium. Time-of-flight magnetic resonance angiography (MRA) is a fast and non-invasive method, but clip-induced artifact limits assessment of the artery in the vicinity of the clip. 1.5T MRA with ultrashort echo time (UTE) reduces metal artifact, but the obtained image is too rough to evaluate the aneurysm remnant, and the description range is too narrow to assess the cerebral vasospasm. We routinely use SIGNA Pioneer 3.0T (GE Healthcare Life Sciences, Buckinghamshire, England) and perform SILENT SCAN with UTE-MRA for the postoperative assessment of the clipped aneurysm and cerebral arteries for SAH patients treated by clipping. It has better image quality and describes arteries with a wide description range, so it possesses the potential to overcome the disadvantages of 1.5T UTE-MRA.
We presented a representative SAH patient who postoperatively underwent 3.0T UTE- MRA after clipping. The artery near the clipped aneurysm was evaluated in detail, and the cerebral arteries were described from the main trunk to the peripheral parts with a wide description range, which enabled the assessment of cerebral vasospasm.
3.0T UTE-MRA may be helpful for the usual assessment of the arteries after clipping and cerebral vasospasm in the future.
3.0T UTE-MRA may be helpful for the usual assessment of the arteries after clipping and cerebral vasospasm in the future.
Dissection of the internal carotid artery (ICA) is an important cause of stroke. Intravenous alteplase administration and mechanical thrombectomy have been strongly recommended for selected patients with acute ischemic stroke. However, the efficacy and safety of these treatments for ischemic stroke due to ICA dissection remain unclear. Here, we report a case of acute ICA dissection successfully treated by microsurgical embolectomy.
A 40-year-old man presented with sudden left hemiparesis and in an unconscious state, with a National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale score of 14. Preoperative radiologic findings revealed an ICA dissection from the extracranial ICA to the intracranial ICA and occlusion at the superior-most aspect of the ICA. A dissection at the superior-most aspect of the ICA occlusion could not be confirmed; therefore, a surgical embolectomy with bypass was initiated. It became apparent that the superior ICA occlusion was not due to dissection but rather to an embolic occlusion; therefore, we undertook a surgical embolectomy and cervical ICA ligation with a double superficial temporal artery-middle cerebral artery bypass. The postoperative course was uneventful and, at the 6-month follow-up, the Modified Rankin Scale score for this patient was 1.
Surgical embolectomy with or without bypass can safely treat acute ischemic stroke due to an ICA dissection that cannot be distinguished between a dissecting occlusion and an embolic occlusion. Thus, it may be considered as an alternative option for patients in whom mechanical thrombectomy has failed or for those who are ineligible for mechanical thrombectomy.
Surgical embolectomy with or without bypass can safely treat acute ischemic stroke due to an ICA dissection that cannot be distinguished between a dissecting occlusion and an embolic occlusion. link3 Thus, it may be considered as an alternative option for patients in whom mechanical thrombectomy has failed or for those who are ineligible for mechanical thrombectomy.
This study was to describe the evolution of patients who underwent surgical treatment of drug- resistant occipital lobe epilepsy (OLE) at our institution.
We performed a retrospective analysis of data collected from electronic and paper clinical records of 20 patients who were diagnosed of OLE and underwent epilepsy surgery at our institution between 1998 and 2018. We also contacted patients by telephone and asked them to fill out a questionnaire about quality of life in epilepsy (QOLIE-10). Assembled data were analyzed using descriptive statistics.
The age at surgery ranged between 19 and 55 years. The period encompassing epilepsy onset and the date of surgery was variable. Semiology of seizures included visual symptoms in 75% of patients. In 90% of cases subdural grids, depth electrodes or a combination of both were used to plan the surgery. The most frequent neuroimaging and histopathological finding was cortical dysplasia (55%). The postoperative follow-up period was up to 15 years. The most common score on the Engel scale was I (70%). Visual deficits increased after surgery. Median score on QOLIE-10 questionnaire was 82.5 (interquartile range 32.5).
Surgical treatment of drug-resistant OLE offers hopeful results to those patients who have run out of pharmacological options and leads to postoperative deficits that are deemed expectable and occasionally acceptable.
Surgical treatment of drug-resistant OLE offers hopeful results to those patients who have run out of pharmacological options and leads to postoperative deficits that are deemed expectable and occasionally acceptable.
Absence or hypoplasia of the internal carotid artery (ICA) is a rare congenital anomaly that is mostly unilateral and highly associated with other intracranial vascular anomalies, of which saccular aneurysm is the most common. Blood flow to the circulation of the affected side is maintained by collateral pathways, some of which include the anterior communicating artery (Acom) as part of their anatomy. Therefore, temporary clipping during microsurgery on Acom aneurysms in patients with unilateral ICA anomalies could jeopardize these collaterals and place the patient at risk of ischemic damage. In this paper, we review the literature on cases with a unilaterally absent ICA associated with Acom aneurysms and provide an illustrative case.
We combined our experience of one case of a unilaterally absent ICA associated with an Acom aneurysm with the 33 existing publications on the same subject in the literature, for a total of 40 cases. We provide a detailed systematic literature review of this association of varupture risk assessment and a tailored management plan to avoid disrupting collateral flow and causing ischemia.
Acom aneurysms in patients with unilateral ICA anomalies, given they are more commonly present contralaterally, could be of acquired etiology, warranting periodic screening in asymptomatic patients. Temporary clipping might be safe in patients with Type D collateral pattern, while those with Types A or B may require intraoperative rupture risk assessment and a tailored management plan to avoid disrupting collateral flow and causing ischemia.