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1.
Eur Spine J ; 2024 Apr 22.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38649486

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: Barbed sutures are tissue control devices that can reduce operating room time and costs. We analyzed the utility of barbed sutures in posterior spinal surgery in order to prove non-inferiority to conventional methods for wound closure. METHODS: A cohort of patients undergoing elective posterior spinal surgery in which barbed (prospective) versus conventional sutures (retrospective) were used was analyzed. The primary endpoint was the occurrence of wound healing complications or the need for surgical revision. Secondary endpoints included postoperative stay, readmission rate, and duration and cost of wound closure. RESULT: A total of 483 patients participated in the study, 183 in the Barbed group and 300 in the Conventional group. Wound dehiscence or seroma occurred in 3.8% and 2.7% of the Barbed and Conventional groups, respectively (p = 0.6588). Both superficial (1.6% versus 4.0%, P = 0.2378) and deep infections (2.7% versus 4.7%, p = 0.4124) occurred similarly in both groups. Overall, the rate of re-intervention due to wound healing problems was also similar (4.9% versus 5.3%, p = 0.9906), as well as, total median hospital stay, postoperative stay and 30-day re-admission rates. The average duration of wound closure (1.66 versus 4.16 min per level operated, p < 0.0001) strongly favored the Barbed group. The mean cost of wound closure per patient was higher in the Barbed group (43.23 € versus 22.67 €, p < 0.0001). CONCLUSIONS: In elective posterior spinal procedures, the use of barbed sutures significantly reduced the duration of wound closure. The wound healing process was not hindered and the added cost related to the suture material was small.

2.
Neurocirugia (Astur : Engl Ed) ; 35(3): 145-151, 2024.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38452931

ABSTRACT

INTRODUCTION: Bone flap replacement after a decompressive craniectomy is a low complexity procedure, but with complications that can negatively impact the patient's outcome. A better knowledge of the risk factors for these complications could reduce their incidence. PATIENTS AND METHODS: A retrospective review of a series of 50 patients who underwent bone replacement after decompressive craniectomy at a tertiary center over a 10-year period was performed. Those clinical variables related to complications after replacement were recorded and their risk factors were analyzed. RESULTS: A total of 18 patients (36%) presented complications after bone flap replacement, of which 10 (55.5%) required a new surgery for their treatment. Most of the replacements (95%) were performed in the first 90 days after the craniectomy, with a tendency to present more complications compared to the subsequent period (37.8% vs 20%, p > 0.05). The most frequent complication was subdural hygroma, which appeared later than infection, the second most frequent complication. The need for ventricular drainage or tracheostomy and the mean time on mechanical ventilation, ICU admission, or waiting until bone replacement were greater in patients who presented post-replacement complications. Previous infections outside the nervous system or the surgical wound was the only risk factor for post-bone flap replacement complications (p = 0.031). CONCLUSIONS: Postoperative complications were recorded in more than a third of the patients who underwent cranial bone flap replacement, and at least half of them required a new surgery. A specific protocol aimed at controlling previous infections could reduce the risk of complications and help establish the optimal time for cranial bone flap replacement.


Subject(s)
Decompressive Craniectomy , Postoperative Complications , Surgical Flaps , Humans , Risk Factors , Decompressive Craniectomy/adverse effects , Female , Male , Retrospective Studies , Postoperative Complications/etiology , Postoperative Complications/epidemiology , Middle Aged , Adult , Bone Transplantation/adverse effects , Aged , Surgical Wound Infection/etiology , Surgical Wound Infection/epidemiology , Subdural Effusion/etiology , Subdural Effusion/prevention & control , Reoperation , Young Adult , Tracheostomy/adverse effects , Adolescent
3.
Neurocirugia (Astur : Engl Ed) ; 35(3): 113-121, 2024.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38244923

ABSTRACT

INTRODUCTION: Predicting the histopathologic grade of meningioma is relevant because local recurrence is significantly greater in WHO grade II-III compared to WHO grade I tumours, which would ideally benefit from a more aggressive surgical strategy. It has been suggested that higher WHO grade tumours are more irregularly-shaped. However, irregularity is a subjective and observer-dependent feature. In this study, the tumour surface irregularity of a large series of meningiomas, measured upon preoperative MRI, is quantified and correlated with the WHO grade. METHODS: Unicentric retrospective observational study of a cohort of symptomatic meningiomas surgically removed in the time period between January 2015 and December 2022. Using specific segmentation software, the Surface Factor (SF) was calculated for each meningioma. SF is an objective parameter that compares the surface of a sphere (minimum surface area for a given volume) with the same volume of the tumour against the actual surface of the tumour. This ratio varies from 0 to 1, being 1 the maximum sphericity. Since irregularly-shaped meningiomas present proportionally greater surface area, the SF tends to decrease as irregularity increases. SF was correlated with WHO grade and its predictive power was estimated with ROC curve analysis. RESULTS: A total of 176 patients (64.7% females) were included in the study; 120 WHO grade I (71.9%), 43 WHO grade II (25.7%) and 4 WHO grade III (2.4%). A statistically significant difference was found between the mean SF of WHO grade I and WHO grade II-III tumours (0.8651 ±â€¯0.049 versus 0.7081 ±â€¯0.105, p < 0.0001). Globally, the SF correctly classified more than 90% of cases (area under ROC curve 0.940) with 93.3% sensibility and 80.9% specificity. A cutoff value of 0.79 yielded the maximum precision, with positive and negative predictive powers of 82.6% and 92.6%, respectively. Multivariate analysis yielded SF as an independent prognostic factor of WHO grade. CONCLUSION: The Surface Factor is an objective and quantitative parameter that helps to identify aggressive meningiomas preoperatively. A cutoff value of 0.79 allowed differentiation between WHO grade I and WHO grade II-III with high precision.


Subject(s)
Magnetic Resonance Imaging , Meningeal Neoplasms , Meningioma , Neoplasm Grading , Humans , Meningioma/pathology , Meningioma/diagnostic imaging , Meningioma/surgery , Female , Male , Retrospective Studies , Meningeal Neoplasms/pathology , Meningeal Neoplasms/diagnostic imaging , Meningeal Neoplasms/surgery , Middle Aged , Aged , Adult , Aged, 80 and over , ROC Curve
4.
Neurocirugía (Soc. Luso-Esp. Neurocir.) ; 33(5): 209-218, sept.-oct. 2022. ilus, tab
Article in English | IBECS | ID: ibc-208211

ABSTRACT

Objective: To evaluate the incidence of significant intraoperative electrophysiological signal changes during surgical positioning, and to assess the effectiveness of head and neck repositioning on the restoration of signals, among patients undergoing surgery for cervical myelopathy.Material and methods: We used multimodal intraoperative monitoring (somatosensory [SEP] and motor evoked potentials [MEP] and spontaneous electromyography) before and after patients’ positioning in a consecutive cohort of 103 patients operated for symptomatic cervical myelopathy. Significant changes were defined as>50% attenuation in amplitude or>10% increase in latency of SEP, or abolishment or 50–80% attenuation of MEP.Results: Out of 103 patients (34.9% female, median age 54.5 years) 88 underwent laminectomy (85.4%) and 15 (14.6%) anterior approach. At the time of positioning, signal alterations occurred in 44 patients (42.7%), yet only 11 patients (10.7%) showed alarming changes. Immediate neck repositioning of these resulted in complete (n=6) or partial (n=4) restoration of potentials, yielding no postoperative deficits. The patient in which signals could not be restored after repositioning resulted in added postoperative deficit. The accuracy (true positives plus true negatives) of monitoring to detect new neurological deficits was 99.0% (102/103) for the entire cohort, and 100% (11/11) for those showing significant changes at the moment of positioning. Overall, only 1 patient, with non-significant SEP attenuation, experienced a new postoperative deficit, yielding a 0.97% rate of false negatives.Conclusion: Among patients undergoing surgery for cervical myelopathy, 10.7% showed alarming electrophysiological signal changes at the time of positioning. Immediate repositioning of the neck resulted in near always restoration of potentials and avoidance of added neurological damage. Complete or partial restoration of potentials after(AU)


Objetivo: Evaluar la incidencia de alteraciones neurofisiológicas intraoperatorias graves en el momento del posicionamiento del paciente, y la efectividad de la recolocación del cuello para revertir dichos cambios en los pacientes que se intervienen de mielopatía cervical.Material y métodos: Se empleó una monitorización intraoperatoria multimodal (potenciales evocados sensoriales [PES], motores [PEM] y electromiografía) antes y después de colocar al paciente en posición, en una cohorte de 103 pacientes consecutivos operados de mielopatía cervical. Se consideraron cambios significativos (de alarma): una disminución >50% de la amplitud o un aumento >10% de la latencia de los PES, o la abolición o disminución >50-80% en amplitud de los PEM.Resultados: De los 103 pacientes (el 34,9% mujeres, mediana de edad: 54,5 años), a 88 se les realizó laminectomía (85,4%) y a 15 (14,6%) un abordaje anterior. En el momento del posicionamiento, ocurrieron alteraciones de señal en 44 pacientes (42,7%), aunque solo en 11 (10,7%) estas fueron significativas. La recolocación inmediata del cuello consiguió revertir la alteración de señal completa (n=6) o parcialmente (n=4), sin producirse déficits postoperatorios. El paciente en el cual la recolocación no consiguió restaurar los potenciales despertó con déficit neurológico añadido. La precisión (verdaderos positivos+verdaderos negativos) de la monitorización intraoperatoria para detectar déficits postoperatorios fue del 99% (102/103) para la cohorte completa y del 100% (11/11) para el subgrupo con alteraciones significativas. Globalmente, solo un paciente, que mostró cambios no significativos, despertó con nuevo déficit neurológico (0,97% de falsos negativos).Conclusión: El 10,7% de los pacientes intervenidos de mielopatía cervical mostraron cambios neurofisiológicos de alarma en el momento del posicionamiento quirúrgico. La inmediata recolocación del cuello revirtió dichos cambios (completa o parcialmente)(AU)


Subject(s)
Humans , Male , Female , Adult , Middle Aged , Aged , Aged, 80 and over , Spinal Cord Diseases/surgery , Intraoperative Complications , Patient Positioning , Neurophysiological Monitoring , Retrospective Studies
5.
Neurocirugia (Astur : Engl Ed) ; 33(5): 209-218, 2022.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36084957

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the incidence of significant intraoperative electrophysiological signal changes during surgical positioning, and to assess the effectiveness of head and neck repositioning on the restoration of signals, among patients undergoing surgery for cervical myelopathy. MATERIAL AND METHODS: We used multimodal intraoperative monitoring (somatosensory [SEP] and motor evoked potentials [MEP] and spontaneous electromyography) before and after patients' positioning in a consecutive cohort of 103 patients operated for symptomatic cervical myelopathy. Significant changes were defined as>50% attenuation in amplitude or>10% increase in latency of SEP, or abolishment or 50-80% attenuation of MEP. RESULTS: Out of 103 patients (34.9% female, median age 54.5 years) 88 underwent laminectomy (85.4%) and 15 (14.6%) anterior approach. At the time of positioning, signal alterations occurred in 44 patients (42.7%), yet only 11 patients (10.7%) showed alarming changes. Immediate neck repositioning of these resulted in complete (n=6) or partial (n=4) restoration of potentials, yielding no postoperative deficits. The patient in which signals could not be restored after repositioning resulted in added postoperative deficit. The accuracy (true positives plus true negatives) of monitoring to detect new neurological deficits was 99.0% (102/103) for the entire cohort, and 100% (11/11) for those showing significant changes at the moment of positioning. Overall, only 1 patient, with non-significant SEP attenuation, experienced a new postoperative deficit, yielding a 0.97% rate of false negatives. CONCLUSION: Among patients undergoing surgery for cervical myelopathy, 10.7% showed alarming electrophysiological signal changes at the time of positioning. Immediate repositioning of the neck resulted in near always restoration of potentials and avoidance of added neurological damage. Complete or partial restoration of potentials after repositioning yielded no postoperative deficits.


Subject(s)
Evoked Potentials, Somatosensory , Laminectomy , Spinal Cord Diseases , Evoked Potentials, Motor/physiology , Evoked Potentials, Somatosensory/physiology , Female , Humans , Laminectomy/adverse effects , Male , Middle Aged , Spinal Cord Diseases/surgery
6.
Neurocirugia (Astur : Engl Ed) ; 33(4): 199-203, 2022.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35725222

ABSTRACT

Angiosarcoma is an infrequent tumor among sarcomas, especially presenting as a primary tumor within the central nervous system, which can lead to a rapid neurological deterioration and death in few months. We present a 41-year old man with a right frontal enhancing hemorrhagic lesion. Surgery was performed with histopathological findings suggesting a primary central nervous system angiosarcoma. He was discharged uneventfully and received adjuvant chemotherapy and radiotherapy. At 5 months, the follow-up MRI showed two lesions with an acute subdural hematoma, suggesting a relapse. Surgery was again conducted finding tumoral membranes attached to the internal layer of the duramater around the right hemisphere. The patient died a few days later due to the recurrence of the subdural hematoma. This case report illustrates a rare and lethal complication of an unusual tumor. The literature reviewed shows that gross-total resection with adjuvant radiotherapy seems to be the best treatment of choice.


Subject(s)
Hemangiosarcoma , Hematoma, Subdural, Acute , Adult , Central Nervous System , Hemangiosarcoma/complications , Hemangiosarcoma/diagnostic imaging , Hemangiosarcoma/surgery , Hematoma, Subdural, Acute/complications , Hematoma, Subdural, Acute/etiology , Humans , Magnetic Resonance Imaging , Male , Neoplasm Recurrence, Local
7.
Neurocirugía (Soc. Luso-Esp. Neurocir.) ; 32(4): 203-208, jul.- ago. 2021. ilus
Article in English | IBECS | ID: ibc-222733

ABSTRACT

Treatment for brain arteriovenous malformations (AVM) include combinations of surgery, radiosurgery and embolization. Very rarely, spontaneous obliteration may occur, especially among small lesions with single superficial vein drainage and prior bleeding. We report the case of a large symptomatic AVM, without history of hemorrhage or prior treatment, in which self-obliteration was noted at surgery. Although MRI suggested the presence of an AVM, no evidence of arterial anomaly was observed in the brain angiography. At surgery, a large cortical nidus with tortuous arterial vessels, resembling that of an AVM but without blood flow, was identified. Complete resection was easily performed without relevant bleeding. The histopathologic study confirmed the diagnosis of a thrombosed AVM. Despite the low probability of recanalization, surgical resection of a suspected spontaneously obliterated AVM may be warranted, in order to reach a definitive diagnosis and to avoid the risk of an eventual bleeding, especially among younger patients (AU)


El tratamiento de las malformaciones arteriovenosas (MAV) cerebrales incluye combinaciones de cirugía, radiocirugía y embolización. Muy rara vez, ocurre una obliteración espontánea, fundamentalmente en MAV pequeñas, con drenaje venoso único superficial y antecedente de sangrado previo. Presentamos un caso de MAV sintomática grande, sin sangrado ni tratamientos previos, en la que se constató auto-trombosis espontánea. Aunque las imágenes de resonancia sugerían la presencia de una MAV, la arteriografía no mostró anomalía arterial compatible. En la cirugía se evidenció un nidus cortical con vasos tortuosos, idéntico a una MAV clásica, aunque sin flujo sanguíneo, por lo que pudo resecarse sin dificultad. La anatomía patológica confirmó la presencia de una MAV trombosada. A pesar del relativamente bajo riesgo de recanalización, la cirugía de una posible MAV trombosada puede ser una opción recomendable, con objeto de llegar al diagnóstico definitivo y evitar un eventual riesgo de sangrado, especialmente en personas jóvenes (AU)


Subject(s)
Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Intracranial Arteriovenous Malformations/diagnostic imaging , Intracranial Thrombosis/diagnostic imaging , Tomography, X-Ray Computed , Magnetic Resonance Imaging , Cerebral Angiography
8.
Article in English, Spanish | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33875378

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the incidence of significant intraoperative electrophysiological signal changes during surgical positioning, and to assess the effectiveness of head and neck repositioning on the restoration of signals, among patients undergoing surgery for cervical myelopathy. MATERIAL AND METHODS: We used multimodal intraoperative monitoring (somatosensory [SEP] and motor evoked potentials [MEP] and spontaneous electromyography) before and after patients' positioning in a consecutive cohort of 103 patients operated for symptomatic cervical myelopathy. Significant changes were defined as>50% attenuation in amplitude or>10% increase in latency of SEP, or abolishment or 50-80% attenuation of MEP. RESULTS: Out of 103 patients (34.9% female, median age 54.5 years) 88 underwent laminectomy (85.4%) and 15 (14.6%) anterior approach. At the time of positioning, signal alterations occurred in 44 patients (42.7%), yet only 11 patients (10.7%) showed alarming changes. Immediate neck repositioning of these resulted in complete (n=6) or partial (n=4) restoration of potentials, yielding no postoperative deficits. The patient in which signals could not be restored after repositioning resulted in added postoperative deficit. The accuracy (true positives plus true negatives) of monitoring to detect new neurological deficits was 99.0% (102/103) for the entire cohort, and 100% (11/11) for those showing significant changes at the moment of positioning. Overall, only 1 patient, with non-significant SEP attenuation, experienced a new postoperative deficit, yielding a 0.97% rate of false negatives. CONCLUSION: Among patients undergoing surgery for cervical myelopathy, 10.7% showed alarming electrophysiological signal changes at the time of positioning. Immediate repositioning of the neck resulted in near always restoration of potentials and avoidance of added neurological damage. Complete or partial restoration of potentials after repositioning yielded no postoperative deficits.

9.
Article in English, Spanish | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33766476

ABSTRACT

Angiosarcoma is an infrequent tumor among sarcomas, especially presenting as a primary tumor within the central nervous system, which can lead to a rapid neurological deterioration and death in few months. We present a 41-year old man with a right frontal enhancing hemorrhagic lesion. Surgery was performed with histopathological findings suggesting a primary central nervous system angiosarcoma. He was discharged uneventfully and received adjuvant chemotherapy and radiotherapy. At 5 months, the follow-up MRI showed two lesions with an acute subdural hematoma, suggesting a relapse. Surgery was again conducted finding tumoral membranes attached to the internal layer of the duramater around the right hemisphere. The patient died a few days later due to the recurrence of the subdural hematoma. This case report illustrates a rare and lethal complication of an unusual tumor. The literature reviewed shows that gross-total resection with adjuvant radiotherapy seems to be the best treatment of choice.

10.
Acta Neurochir (Wien) ; 163(6): 1665-1675, 2021 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33751215

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Decision about treatment of incidentally found intracranial meningiomas is controversial and conditioned by the growth potential of these tumors. We aimed to evaluate the growth rate of a cohort of incidentally found asymptomatic meningiomas and to analyze their natural course and the need for eventual treatment. METHODS: A total of 193 patients harboring intracranial meningiomas (85 with 109 incidental and 108 with 112 symptomatic) were included between 2015 and 2019. In the prospective cohort of incidental meningiomas, we measured size at diagnosis, volumetric growth rate (by segmentation software), appearance of symptoms, and need for surgery or radiotherapy. Progression-free survival and risk factors for growth were assessed with Kaplan-Meier survival and Cox regression analyses. RESULTS: Among incidental meningiomas, 94/109 (86.2%) remained untreated during a median follow-up of 49.3 months. Tumor growth was observed in 91 (83.5%) and > 15% growth in 40 (36.7%). Neurological symptoms developed in 1 patient (1.2%). Volume increased an average of 0.51 cm3/year (95% CI, 0.20-0.82). Nine patients were operated (9.2%) and 4 underwent radiotherapy (4.7%). Treatment-related complication rates of incidental and symptomatic meningiomas were 0% and 35.4%, respectively. Persistent neurological defects occurred in 46 (40.7%) of symptomatic versus 2 (2.3%) of incidental meningiomas. Among covariates, only brain edema resulted in an increased risk of significant tumor growth in the female subgroup (Cox regression HR 2.96, 95% CI 1.02-8.61, p = 0.046). Size at diagnosis was significantly greater in the symptomatic meningioma group (37.33 cm3 versus 4.74 cm3, p < 0.001). CONCLUSIONS: Overall, 86% of incidentally found meningiomas remained untreated over the first 4 years of follow-up. The majority grew within the 20% range, yet very few developed symptoms. Treatment-related morbidity was absent in the incidental meningioma group.


Subject(s)
Incidental Findings , Meningeal Neoplasms/pathology , Meningioma/pathology , Adult , Aged , Aged, 80 and over , Cell Proliferation , Female , Follow-Up Studies , Humans , Kaplan-Meier Estimate , Male , Meningeal Neoplasms/radiotherapy , Meningeal Neoplasms/surgery , Meningioma/mortality , Meningioma/radiotherapy , Meningioma/surgery , Middle Aged , Morbidity , Progression-Free Survival , Proportional Hazards Models , Prospective Studies , Risk Factors , Treatment Outcome
11.
Neurocirugía (Soc. Luso-Esp. Neurocir.) ; 32(1): 1-9, ene.- feb. 2021. ilus, tab, graf
Article in Spanish | IBECS | ID: ibc-222435

ABSTRACT

Antecedentes y objetivos El tratamiento del dolor por desaferentización mediante drezotomía espinal es una opción terapéutica contrastada en la literatura. En los últimos años, la drezotomía ha visto relegado su empleo a un segundo plano debido a la eclosión de las terapias neuromoduladoras. Los objetivos de este estudio son demostrar que la drezotomía continúa siendo un tratamiento efectivo y seguro, y analizar aquellos factores predictores de éxito. Pacientes y métodos Se realizó un estudio retrospectivo de todos los pacientes tratados en nuestro servicio mediante drezotomía espinal desde 1998 hasta 2018. Se excluyeron los casos de drezotomía bulbar. Se emplearon la escala visual analógica (EVA) y la reducción de la medicación habitual como variables resultado, y se analizaron variables demográficas, clínicas y quirúrgicas como factores predictores de éxito. Resultados Un total de 27 pacientes (51,9% mujeres) de 53,7 años de edad media fueron tratados mediante drezotomía. La etiología principal del dolor fue por avulsión de plexo braquial (55,6%) seguida de causa tumoral (18,5%). El tiempo medio de evolución del dolor fue de 8,4 años con una intensidad media de 8,7 según la EVA, pese a que el 63% de los pacientes habían recibido tratamiento neuroestimulador previo. Durante el postoperatorio inmediato un 77,8% de los pacientes presentaron una reducción del 50% o más en la EVA. Tras un seguimiento medio de 22 meses posdrezotomía, permaneció una reducción de al menos el 50% en la EVA en el 59,3% de los pacientes (reducción media de 4,9 puntos) permitiendo una reducción del tratamiento analgésico habitual en el 70,4% de ellos. La drezotomía en la avulsión de plexo braquial presentó una tasa de éxito (93%) superior al resto de patologías (41,7%) de manera significativa (p = 0,001) (AU)


Background and objectives The treatment of deafferentation pain by spinal DREZotomy is a proven therapeutic option in the literature. In recent years, use of DREZotomy has been relegated to second place due to the emergence of neuromodulation therapies. The objectives of this study are to demonstrate that DREZotomy continues to be an effective and safe treatment and to analyse predictive factors for success. Patients and methods A retrospective study was conducted of all patients treated in our department with spinal DREZotomy from 1998 to 2018. Bulbar DREZotomy procedures were excluded. A visual analogue scale (VAS) and the reduction of routine medication were used as outcome variables. Demographic, clinical and operative variables were analysed as predictive factors for success. Results A total of 27 patients (51.9% female) with a mean age of 53.7 years underwent DREZotomy. The main cause of pain was brachial plexus injury (BPI) (55.6%) followed by neoplasms (18.5%). The mean time of pain evolution was 8.4 years with a mean intensity of 8.7 according to the VAS, even though 63% of the patients had previously received neurostimulation therapy. Favourable outcome (≥ 50% pain reduction in the VAS) was observed in 77.8% of patients during the postoperative period and remained in 59.3% of patients after 22 months average follow-up (mean reduction of 4.9 points). This allowed for a reduction in routine analgesic treatment in 70.4% of them. DREZotomy in BPI-related pain presented a significantly higher success rate (93%) than the other pathologies (41.7%) (p = .001). No association was observed between outcome and age, gender, DREZ technique, duration of pain or previous neurostimulation therapies. There were six neurological complications, four post-operative transient neurological deficits and two permanent deficits (AU)


Subject(s)
Humans , Male , Female , Adult , Middle Aged , Aged , Brachial Plexus Neuropathies/surgery , Causalgia/surgery , Spinal Nerve Roots/surgery , Retrospective Studies , Treatment Outcome , Monitoring, Intraoperative
12.
Article in English, Spanish | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32376193

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: The treatment of deafferentation pain by spinal DREZotomy is a proven therapeutic option in the literature. In recent years, use of DREZotomy has been relegated to second place due to the emergence of neuromodulation therapies. The objectives of this study are to demonstrate that DREZotomy continues to be an effective and safe treatment and to analyse predictive factors for success. PATIENTS AND METHODS: A retrospective study was conducted of all patients treated in our department with spinal DREZotomy from 1998 to 2018. Bulbar DREZotomy procedures were excluded. A visual analogue scale (VAS) and the reduction of routine medication were used as outcome variables. Demographic, clinical and operative variables were analysed as predictive factors for success. RESULTS: A total of 27 patients (51.9% female) with a mean age of 53.7 years underwent DREZotomy. The main cause of pain was brachial plexus injury (BPI) (55.6%) followed by neoplasms (18.5%). The mean time of pain evolution was 8.4 years with a mean intensity of 8.7 according to the VAS, even though 63% of the patients had previously received neurostimulation therapy. Favourable outcome (≥50% pain reduction in the VAS) was observed in 77.8% of patients during the postoperative period and remained in 59.3% of patients after 22 months average follow-up (mean reduction of 4.9 points). This allowed for a reduction in routine analgesic treatment in 70.4% of them. DREZotomy in BPI-related pain presented a significantly higher success rate (93%) than the other pathologies (41.7%) (p=.001). No association was observed between outcome and age, gender, DREZ technique, duration of pain or previous neurostimulation therapies. There were six neurological complications, four post-operative transient neurological deficits and two permanent deficits. CONCLUSION: Dorsal root entry zone surgery is effective and safe for treating patients with deafferentation pain, especially after brachial plexus injury. It can be considered an alternative treatment after failed neurostimulation techniques for pain control. However, its indication should be considered as the first therapeutic option after medical therapy failure due to its good long-term results.


Subject(s)
Brachial Plexus Neuropathies , Brachial Plexus , Causalgia , Causalgia/etiology , Causalgia/therapy , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Retrospective Studies , Spinal Nerve Roots/surgery
13.
Article in English, Spanish | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33060023

ABSTRACT

Treatment for brain arteriovenous malformations (AVM) include combinations of surgery, radiosurgery and embolization. Very rarely, spontaneous obliteration may occur, especially among small lesions with single superficial vein drainage and prior bleeding. We report the case of a large symptomatic AVM, without history of hemorrhage or prior treatment, in which self-obliteration was noted at surgery. Although MRI suggested the presence of an AVM, no evidence of arterial anomaly was observed in the brain angiography. At surgery, a large cortical nidus with tortuous arterial vessels, resembling that of an AVM but without blood flow, was identified. Complete resection was easily performed without relevant bleeding. The histopathologic study confirmed the diagnosis of a thrombosed AVM. Despite the low probability of recanalization, surgical resection of a suspected spontaneously obliterated AVM may be warranted, in order to reach a definitive diagnosis and to avoid the risk of an eventual bleeding, especially among younger patients.

14.
World Neurosurg ; 134: 164-169, 2020 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31698124

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Granular cell astrocytoma is a rare and aggressive subtype of astrocytoma that is histopathologically well defined in the literature. It is formed by polygonal cells with granular cytoplasm mixed with neoplastic astrocytes and usually a perivascular infiltrate of lymphocytes. Despite its unusual histologic appearance, relevant radiologic features have not yet been described. CASE DESCRIPTION: We report 2 middle-aged patients with neurologic symptoms secondary to a newly diagnosed brain tumor. The absence of central tumor necrosis as well as the presence of an atypical pattern of enhancement and areas of intense diffusion restriction on magnetic resonance imaging in both cases led to the diagnosis of primary central nervous system lymphoma. Histopathologic findings in both tumors showed an aggressive astrocytoma with a prominent granular cell population and perivascular lymphocytic cuffing in tissue, corresponding to a granular cell astrocytoma. Despite the favorable prognostic factors, including World Health Organization grades II and III astrocytomas and IDH mutations, the outcome was poor. CONCLUSIONS: Granular cell astrocytomas can show unusual aggressive radiologic features that do not correspond to their histopathologic grade of malignancy. The presence of perivascular lymphocytic infiltrate may alter the typical radiologic appearance of common astrocytomas.


Subject(s)
Astrocytoma/pathology , Brain Neoplasms/pathology , Cytoplasmic Granules/pathology , Adult , Astrocytoma/diagnostic imaging , Astrocytoma/therapy , Brain Neoplasms/diagnostic imaging , Brain Neoplasms/therapy , Humans , Magnetic Resonance Imaging , Male , Middle Aged
15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30002916

ABSTRACT

INTRODUCTION: Posterior migration of sequestered disc is an extremely rare event that mimics more common spinal lesions as spinal tumors, making difficult its preoperative diagnosis and appropriate management. We retrospectively reviewed all lumbar disc herniations treated by surgery at our institution from 2006 to 2016 to identify cases with posterior sequestered disc fragments and possible misdiagnosis for other spinal lesions. Complementarily, a literature review of misdiagnosed cases of posterior migrated discs was undertaken. CASE REPORT: Three posterior sequestered lumbar disc cases (one intradural), were found among the 1153 reviewed surgeries. Two of them, presenting with progressive neurological deficit, were respectively misdiagnosed as pseudotumoral lesion and meningioma/neurogenic tumor on MRI. After intraoperative diagnosis and emergent resection, histology confirmed intervertebral disc tissue. The remaining case had an accurate preoperative diagnosis and after an initial conservative management finally underwent surgery because of refractory pain. Full recovery was achieved months after surgical treatment in all cases. DISCUSSION: Non-tumoral lesions are the most frequent misdiagnosis of posterior sequestered lumbar disc described in the literature. Early surgical treatment is the standard management due to high incidence of cauda equine syndrome (CES); however, spontaneous regression of posterior sequestered lumbar disc herniations has been recently reported. In conclusion low incidence and similar clinical and radiological features with other more common posterior spinal lesions like hematomas, synovial cyst or abscess turns posterior sequestered disc herniations a diagnosis challenge. Despite high incidence of CES, an initial conservative management should be evaluated in selected patients without neurological deficit and well-controlled pain.

16.
J Spine Surg ; 3(3): 481-483, 2017 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29057361

ABSTRACT

We describe an exceptional complication of cervical spine surgery in a 63-year-old male. He suffered the impact of a beam to the top of his head. During evaluation in the emergency room he reported intense neck pain with no other neurological symptoms or findings on physical examination. Spine computed tomography (CT) showed C3 vertebral body fracture that required surgical stabilization. A right side anterior approach to upper cervical spine with C3 corpectomy and placement of iliac bone autograft was performed. After surgery the patient presented dysphagia, dysarthria and limitation tongue mobility to the right side. These findings were consistent with hypoglossal neuropraxia probably related to soft tissue traction generated by the upper part of the self-retaining retractor. After discharge the patient experienced spontaneous improvement of hypoglossal paresis.

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