ABSTRACT
THE SUBCHOROIDAL APPROACH has taken its place among the surgical access routes to the third ventricle. Eighteen centuries ago, in his major anatomic work, Galen detailed with astonishing accuracy the anatomy of the structures around the third ventricle and the procedure for exposing this cavity by entering the lateral ventricles and elevating its roof. Even more surprising is Galen's pioneering description of surgical maneuvers of the third ventricle in living animals in a way that anticipated the modern subchoroidal approach.
Subject(s)
Cerebral Ventricles/surgery , Choroid Plexus/surgery , General Surgery/history , Anatomy/history , Animals , Cerebral Ventricles/anatomy & histology , Choroid Plexus/anatomy & histology , Greek World , History, Ancient , HumansABSTRACT
Out of a series of 43 cases operated on for ruptured intracranial aneurysms over a 12-month-period, 32 patients were followed up to 12 months postoperatively with repeated evaluations of cerebral blood flow, using the Xenon133 inhalation technique. No statistically significant differences in cerebral perfusion were detected between the subgroups of good-grade patients, who were submitted respectively to early, or delayed surgery. Depression of flow in the affected hemisphere of poor-grade patients was principally related to the preoperative occurrence of an intracerebral haematoma. The overall results were not consistent with the hypothesis that early surgical intervention results in long-lasting effects on the cerebral circulation.