This report describes a case of a wide-necked intracranial artery aneurysm treated using a combination of endovascular stent implantation across an aneurysm neck and endosaccular coil placement to obliterate the aneurysm. The technique described provides another treatment to better manage the difficult entity of wide-necked intracranial aneurysms that may be unsuitable for clipping.
Treatment of intracranial posterior circulation stenoses with drug-eluting stents is technically feasible, and the rate of clinically significant periprocedural complications is low. Rates of stenosis recurrence are reduced compared with those of bare-metal stents in the midterm. Midterm clinical outcome is excellent; no symptom recurrence was observed in this patient cohort.
The aim of this study was to compare complications of surgery in arteriovenous malformations (AVMs) supplied by the middle cerebral artery (MCA) with and without a lenticulostriate arterial contribution. Ninety-two consecutive surgical resections of AVMs with an angiographically demonstrated MCA supply were performed between January 1989 and July 1996. Ten of these cases had a significant lenticulostriate arterial contribution. The cases were graded according to the Spetzler-Martin classification. There were no deaths and 4.3% of cases developed new major neurological deficit by the 3-month follow-up examination. All cases had angiographically confirmed obliteration of the AVM. There were no complications in 16 patients with Spetzler-Martin Grade I AVMs, one case of complications in 40 patients with Grade II AVMs, eight cases of complications in 26 patients with Grade III AVMs, and seven cases of complications in 10 patients with Grade IV and V AVMs. The supply of blood from lenticulostriate branches was associated with complications in eight of the 10 cases. The effect of the presence of a lenticulostriate arterial supply was most apparent in cases of Grade III AVMs: complications were experienced in three of 20 patients whose AVMs were not supplied by the arteries and in five of six patients whose AVMs were fed by the lenticulostriate arteries. This difference is significant (p < 0.0001). The conclusions drawn from this study are that for Grade III AVMs, the presence of a lenticulostriate arterial supply can be considered a factor predictive of an increased risk of surgical complications.
A child is described who presented with a large right vascular acoustic neuroma causing raised intracranial pressure and brain-stem compression. Ventriculoperitoneal shunting and arterial embolization were performed prior to total tumor excision. Acoustic neuromas are a rarity in childhood, and preoperative arterial embolization has infrequently been described as an adjunct to acoustic neuroma surgery.
SUMMARY Over the past decade research has suggested that stutterers have bilateral cerebral motor or auditory speech areas. Three typical adult stutterers showed normal unilateral left cerebral dominance for speech on the intracarotid sodium amylobarbitone (amytal) test, but one 'dysphatic' stutterer had bilateral cortical speech representation. The latter is a very rare finding in right handed individuals and presumably is a consequence of the head injury induced aphasia that preceded the onset of stuttering.Some 40o of children stutter, and while most subsequently remit, stuttering persists in about
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