Intravenous Nimodipine was administered to 109 patients (65 female and 44 male) with either pre- or post-operative progressive neurological deterioration from cerebral vasospasm following subarachnoid hemorrhage from a ruptured aneurysm. In 91 of the patients the efficacy of Nimodipine in relieving ischemic symptoms was assessed and in all of the 109 patients the tolerance was evaluated. The aneurysms were related to following arteries: anterior communicating artery (41%), middle cerebral artery (24%), internal carotid artery (10%), vertebro-basilar arteries (4%) and others (5.5%); 11% of the patients had multiple aneurysms. On 16 of the 91 patients no surgery was performed. On 16% of the remaining 75 patients surgery was performed within 72 hours after the hemorrhage, 57% were operated between day 4 and day 15 and 29% after day 16. The ischemic neurological deficits occurred preoperatively in 67% of the patients and post-operatively in 23%. At the beginning of treatment 84% of the patients were graded III-V according to the Hunt and Hess grading system. Most of the patients received doses of 24-48 mg Nimodipine daily as constant i.v. infusion for 7-10 days. The grade of neurological deficit at the end of the treatment was evaluated according to the Glasgow Outcome Scale. 59 (65%) of the patients showed complete recovery or marked improvement of the ischemic symptoms while 22% remained unchanged and 11% died due to severe vasospasm. Administration of Nimodipine seemed to be more efficient in cases where treatment was started within 24 hours. In the patient group which was treated pre-operatively, recurrent hemorrhage was recorded in 8% of the patients.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
61 infants and children underwent surgery of acute hygroma, acute subdural hematoma, chronic subdural hygroma, chronic subdural hematoma, and subdural empyema. Long time-follow up including computerized tomography could be performed in 20 of these cases. Only 3 CT-scans had been without pathological finding. The most common finding had been an enlargement of the inner and outer CSF spaces suggesting cerebral atrophy. No correlation had been found to kind of surgical treatment and clinical status.
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