Background: Hemifacial spasm is an involuntary condition that involves muscles innervated by the ipsilateral facial nerve. There are secondary causes of hemifacial spasm that can produce a typical presentation of symptoms. Extrinsic compression of the facial colliculus at the floor of the fourth ventricle is responsible for < 0.6% of the causes of secondary hemifacial spasm, as the cases with this origin reported in the literature are rare. Case Reports: We present the case of a 43-year-old female with hemifacial spasm of typical characteristics 6 months after onset. Upon clinical examination, a severe contraction of the orbicularis oculi, orbicularis oris, and superficial muscles of the neck displaying 50 crisis per hour was revealed. Brain magnetic resonance imaging showed absence of the facial nerve vascular loop in the cisternal portion, with evidence of an intraventricular tumor in relation with the medial portion of the fourth ventricle at the facial colliculus level, indicating a secondary origin of hemifacial spasm. Preoperative electromyography demonstrated irritative electric activity in the muscular branches of the facial nerve. A telovelar approach was performed to the fourth ventricle with intraoperative electrophysiology monitoring, with immediate resolution of the irritative activity after complete tumor resection. The result of the histopathologic study was a choroid plexus papilloma. Conclusion: Fourth ventricle tumors with extrinsic compression of the facial colliculus represent < 0.6% of the causes of hemifacial spasm. Its relationship with choroid plexuses papilloma is being described as the first case reported in the literature. Clinical correlation, imaging, and intraoperative findings in conjunction with intraoperative electrophysiology recordings allow to predict the resolution of symptoms after resecting the lesion.
Objective: Previous reports proposed prelemniscal radiations (Raprl) as a target to treat motor symptoms of Parkinson's disease, and this was found particularly effective to control rest and postural tremor. However, tremor of other etiologies has been seldom treated with deep brain stimulation or ablation in this target. We present a series of such cases successfully treated by Raprl radiofrequency (RF) lesions. Material and Methods: Six patients with predominant unilateral tremor on the right arm: 4 intention, 1 cerebellar and 1 rubral tremor, incapacitating in spite of at least 2 regimes of medical treatment at maximal tolerated doses, were operated under local anesthesia. RF lesions were performed in Raprl contralateral to most prominent symptoms. Patients had monthly evaluation of tremor severity through the Fahn-Tolosa-Marin Tremor Rating Scale and disability through the Tremor Disability Scale along a 1-year follow-up. Results: In 4/6 patients tremor was stopped by the simple insertion of an RF electrode in Raprl; in the other 2 cases, stimulation through the RF electrode at 100 Hz, with 100 µs and 1.0-1.5 V, stopped the tremor without side effects. Tremor disappeared in all cases immediately after surgery and partially reappeared in 2 cases with an amplitude about 20% of the preoperative condition. RF lesions in postoperative MRI ranked from 1.8 to 2.6 mm in diameter. Conclusions: RF lesioning in Raprl is a simple, highly effective, inexpensive way to treat tremor of different etiologies.
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