Two patients are discussed who presented at our Institute with endocrine dysfunction and sellar enlargement. CT scans revealed intra and suprasellar expanding lesions with ring enhancement. The postoperative histological examination showed remnants of Rathke's cleft cyst together with signs of inflammation. CT and MRI pictures, and possible mechanisms of abscess formation in this region are discussed.
Chronic intracranial hypotension is considered as a frequent complication in shunted hydrocephalus, besides obstruction and shunt-infections. In the last twenty years 32 cases of slit-ventricle were diagnosed among the more than one thousand operations on hydrocephalic children at the Paediatric Department of the National Institute of Neurosurgery, Budapest, Hungary. Most of them have been operated on in infancy. Time from the first operation to the development of slit-ventricle ranged from one to twelve years, the mean was 6.5 years. Seven patients were symptomless (22%), while 25 patients (78%) had more or less severe slit-ventricle syndrome with headache (25 cases), nausea/vomiting (23 cases), altered consciousness (21 cases), brainstem signs (12 cases), and epileptic fits (2 cases). Ten patients with moderate clinical signs improved under conservative treatment. In 15 cases an anti-siphon device (ASD) was implanted. In five of them the clinical result was good, but in the remaining 10 cases typical hypertensive signs were seen. In these cases low flow rate valves were implanted instead of the middle flow rate valve and ASD. In one case the intracranial hypertension persisted, so a middle flow rate shunt system was "reimplanted" and finally the patient improved. In this study the experiences with these 32 cases will be analysed and discussed. The authors stress the primary use of combined valves to avoid the slit-ventricle syndrome.
Image guidance during transoral exposure of the upper cervical spine offered excellent three-dimensional guidance on the ventral surface of the craniocervical junction, allowing a safer, more controlled surgery. As the targets of the transoral spinal surgery are fixed bony and ligamentous structures, no shifting occurs and continuous high navigation accuracy can be achieved. The use of the navigation can reduce the significance of the intraoperative fluoroscopy, diminishing the radiograph load of the patient and the operating room team.
For localization of the epileptogenic zone in cases of focal epilepsy, detailed clinical investigations, imaging studies, and electrophysiological methods are used. If the noninvasive presurgical evaluation provides insufficient data, intracranial electrodes are necessary. Computed tomography and MR imaging techniques are the gold standard for localization of the postoperative position of the implanted intracranial electrode contacts. If the electrode strips are inserted through a bur hole, however, the exact localization of the electrode contacts on the patient's brain remains uncertain for the surgeon during insertion. Therefore, the authors developed a simple method to visualize the electrodes during the procedure. In this method they combine neuronavigation and intraoperative fluoroscopy for parallel visualization of the cortex, electrodes, and the navigation probe. The target region is searched with neuronavigation, a bur hole is made over the optimal entry point, and using real-time fluoroscopy the strip electrode is slid to the tip of the navigation probe, which was kept over the area of interest. At the authors' institution 26 strips in 8 patients have been inserted with this technique, and none of the strips had to be repositioned. There were no complications with this procedure and the prolongation of surgery time is acceptable. Compared to previously published electrode placement methods, this one enhances the accuracy of electrode placement at occipital, parietal, frontal, or interhemispheric regions as well. Intraoperative visualization of the electrodes with fluoroscopy combined with neuronavigation during positioning through a bur hole gives the neurosurgeon the ability to control the real position of the electrode over the gyri during the procedure.
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