Our findings suggest that IVROBA strongly influences poor outcome in patients with cyanotic heart disease. The key to decreasing poor outcomes may be the prevention and management of IVROBA. To reduce operative and anesthetic risk in these patients, abscesses should be managed by less invasive aspiration methods guided by computed tomography. Abscesses larger than 2 cm in diameter, in deep-located or parieto-occipital regions, should be aspirated immediately and repeatedly, mainly using computed tomography-guided methods to decrease intracranial pressure and avoid IVROBA. IVROBA should be aggressively treated by aspiration methods for the abscess coupled with the appropriate intravenous and intrathecal administration of antibiotics while evaluating intracranial pressure pathophysiology.
Sixty-two cases of brain abscess with congenital cyanotic heart disease are reviewed. A sharp peak in the age distribution was seen at 4 to 7 years of age. Of 62 cases, 38 (61.2%) had a tetralogy of Fallot, and six had a transposition of the great vessels. The majority of these abscesses were supratentorial and 76% of abscesses were found in the frontal, temporal, and parietal lobes. Multiple abscesses were present in 19.4% of cases. Sterile cultures were obtained in 61% of the abscesses, and the increasing percentage of sterile cultures seems to be the result of broad-spectrum antibiotic therapy. The overall mortality rate was 37% but there were no deaths after surgical excision secondary to aspiration. Since the introduction of computerized tomography, aspiration without total excision has produced good results, and therefore it is believed that the number of cases which are cured with aspiration therapy alone will gradually increase in the future.
Intracranial aneurysms are formed not only at the bifurcation of an artery but also at its branching and bending points. However, an aneurysm located at the bifurcation, such as the anterior communicating artery and the middle cerebral artery, bleeds easily in contrast with lateral aneurysms such as those found at the branching and bending points on the internal carotid artery.
The effects of continuous drainage of cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) on vasospasm and hydrocephalus were analyzed retrospectively in 108 patients with subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH) who were operated on for ruptured aneurysms within 48 hours of their onset. Ninety-two of these patients underwent a procedure for CSF drainage (cisternal drainage, ventricular drainage, lumbar drainage, or a combination of these). The duration, the total volume, and the average daily volume of CSF drainage were 10.4 ± 7.0 days (mean ± SD), 2034 ± 1566 ml, and 190 ± 65.3 ml, respectively. Patients with a greater drainage volume at a lower height of drainage in the early period after SAH developed more cerebral infarctions later (P < 0.025). The relationship between the total volume of CSF removed and shunt-dependent hydrocephalus was determined to be statistically significant (P < 0.005). Cerebral infarction and hydrocephalus after SAH were also found to be statistically associated (P < 0.001). Thus, continuous cerebrospinal fluid drainage should not be performed too readily in patients with SAH, because the removal of a large amount of CSF can induce cerebral vasospasm as well as hydrocephalus.
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