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Showing papers in "Journal of Neurosurgery in 1987"


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The data demonstrate that fluid percussion injury in the rat reproduces many of the features of head injury observed in other models and species, and could represent a useful experimental approach to studies of pathological changes similar to those seen in human head injury.
Abstract: Fluid percussion models produce brain injury by rapidly injecting fluid volumes into the cranial cavity. The authors have systematically examined the effects of varying magnitudes of fluid percussion injury in the rat on neurological, systemic physiological, and histopathological changes. Acute neurological experiments showed that fluid percussion injury in 53 rats produced either irreversible apnea and death or transient apnea (lasting 54 seconds or less) and reversible suppression of postural and nonpostural function (lasting 60 minutes or less). As the magnitude if injury increased, the mortality rate and the duration of suppression of somatomotor reflexes increased. Unlike other rat models in which concussive brain injury is produced by impact, convulsions were observed in only 13% of survivors. Transient apnea was probably not associated with a significant hypoxic insult to animals that survived. Ten rats that sustained a moderate magnitude of injury (2.9 atm) exhibited chronic locomotor deficits that persisted for 4 to 8 days. Systemic physiological experiments in 20 rats demonstrated that all levels of injury studied produced acute systemic hypertension, bradycardia, and increased plasma glucose levels. Hypertension with subsequent hypotension resulted from higher magnitudes of injury. The durations of hypertension and suppression of amplitude on electroencephalography were related to the magnitudes of injury. While low levels of injury produced no significant histopathological alterations, higher magnitudes produced subarachnoid and intraparenchymal hemorrhage and, with increasing survival, necrotic change and cavitation. These data demonstrate that fluid percussion injury in the rat reproduces many of the features of head injury observed in other models and species. Thus, this animal model could represent a useful experimental approach to studies of pathological changes similar to those seen in human head injury.

1,044 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Histological analysis of 195 biopsy specimens obtained from various locations within the volumes defined by CT and MRI revealed that contrast enhancement most often corresponded to tumor tissue without intervening parenchyma, and isolated tumor cell infiltration extended at least as far as T2 prolongation on magnetic resonance images.
Abstract: ✓ Forty patients with previously untreated intracranial glial neoplasms underwent stereotaxic serial biopsies assisted by computerized tomography (CT) and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). Tumor volumes defined by computer reconstruction of contrast enhancement and low-attenuation boundaries on CT and T1 and T2 prolongation on MRI revealed that tumor volumes defined by T2-weighted MRI scans were larger than those defined by low-attenuation or contrast enhancement on CT scans. Histological analysis of 195 biopsy specimens obtained from various locations within the volumes defined by CT and MRI revealed that: 1) contrast enhancement most often corresponded to tumor tissue without intervening parenchyma; 2) hypodensity corresponded to parenchyma infiltrated by isolated tumor cells or in some instances to tumor tissue in low-grade gliomas or to simple edema; and 3) isolated tumor cell infiltration extended at least as far as T2 prolongation on magnetic resonance images. This information may be useful in plann...

736 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The authors postulated that consecutively admitted patients who fulfilled research diagnostic criteria for minor head injury and who were carefully screened for antecedent neuropsychiatric disorder and prior head injury would exhibit subacute cognitive and memory deficits that would resolve over a period of 1 to 3 months postinjury.
Abstract: ✓ The majority of hospital admissions for head trauma are due to minor injuries; that is, no or only transient loss of consciousness without major complications and not requiring intracranial surgery. Despite the low mortality rate following minor head injury, there is controversy surrounding the extent of morbidity and the long-term sequelae. The authors postulated that consecutively admitted patients who fulfilled research diagnostic criteria for minor head injury and who were carefully screened for antecedent neuropsychiatric disorder and prior head injury would exhibit subacute cognitive and memory deficits that would resolve over a period of 1 to 3 months postinjury. To evaluate this hypothesis, the neurobehavioral functioning of 57 patients was compared within 1 week after minor head injury (baseline) and at 1 month postinjury with that of 56 selected control subjects at three medical centers. Quantified tests of memory, attention, and information-processing speed revealed that neurobehavioral impai...

728 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It was concluded that severe head injuries commonly diagnosed as shaking injuries require impact to occur and that shaking alone in an otherwise normal baby is unlikely to cause the shaken baby syndrome.
Abstract: Because a history of shaking is often lacking in the so-called "shaken baby syndrome," diagnosis is usually based on a constellation of clinical and radiographic findings. Forty-eight cases of infants and young children with this diagnosis seen between 1978 and 1985 at the Children's Hospital of Philadelphia were reviewed. All patients had a presenting history thought to be suspicious for child abuse, and either retinal hemorrhages with subdural or subarachnoid hemorrhages or a computerized tomography scan showing subdural or subarachnoid hemorrhages with interhemispheric blood. The physical examination and presence of associated trauma were analyzed; autopsy findings for the 13 fatalities were reviewed. All fatal cases had signs of blunt impact to the head, although in more than half of them these findings were noted only at autopsy. All deaths were associated with uncontrollably increased intracranial pressure. Models of 1-month-old infants with various neck and skull parameters were instrumented with accelerometers and shaken and impacted against padded or unpadded surfaces. Angular accelerations for shakes were smaller than those for impacts by a factor of 50. All shakes fell below injury thresholds established for subhuman primates scaled for the same brain mass, while impacts spanned concussion, subdural hematoma, and diffuse axonal injury ranges. It was concluded that severe head injuries commonly diagnosed as shaking injuries require impact to occur and that shaking alone in an otherwise normal baby is unlikely to cause the shaken baby syndrome.

663 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The angiographic, computerized tomography, and magnetic resonance imaging findings were compared in 10 patients with a total of 16 pathologically verified cavernous angiomas and the combination of a reticulated core of mixed signal intensity (SI) with a surrounding rim of decreased SI strongly suggests the diagnosis of a cavernous malformation.
Abstract: The angiographic, computerized tomography (CT), and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) findings were compared in 10 patients with a total of 16 pathologically verified cavernous angiomas. Only three lesions had abnormal vasculature in the form of venous pooling or a capillary blush. The CT scans were positive in seven patients and detected 14 lesions, while high-field strength (1.5 Tesla) MRI was positive in each case and demonstrated 27 distinct lesions. On T2-weighted MRI, the combination of a reticulated core of mixed signal intensity (SI) with a surrounding rim of decreased SI strongly suggests the diagnosis of a cavernous malformation. Smaller lesions appear as areas of decreased SI (black dots). The sensitivity of MRI is based on magnetic susceptibility and possibly diffusion effects related to field heterogeneity that is more conspicuous on high-field imaging and caused by the presence of excessive iron (hemosiderin).

542 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is suggested that dural and intradural AVM's differ in etiology (acquired vs. congenital) and that they have different pathophysiology, radiographic findings, clinical presentation, and response to treatment.
Abstract: The medical records and arteriograms of 81 patients with spinal arteriovenous malformations (AVM's) were reviewed, and the vascular lesions were classified as dural arteriovenous (AV) fistulas or intradural AVM's. Intradural AVM's were further classified as intramedullary AVM's (juvenile and glomus types) and direct AV fistulas, which were extramedullary or intramedullary in location. Dural AV fistulas were defined as being supplied by a dural artery and draining into spinal veins via an AV shunt in the intervertebral foramen. Intramedullary AVM's were defined as having the AV shunt contained at least partially within the cord or pia and receiving arterial supply by medullary arteries. Of the 81 patients, 27 (33%) had dural AV fistulas and 54 (67%) had intradural AVM's. Several dissimilarities in clinical and radiographic findings of the two subgroups were evident. The patients with intramedullary AVM's were younger; the age at onset of symptoms averaged 27 years compared to 49 years for dural AV fistulas. The most common initial symptom associated with dural AV fistulas was steadily progressive paresis, whereas hemorrhage was the most common presenting symptom in cases of intramedullary lesions. No patients with dural AV fistulas had subarachnoid hemorrhage. Activity exacerbated symptoms more frequently in patients with dural lesions. Associated vascular anomalies occurred only in cases of intradural AVM's. In 96% of the dural lesions the AV nidus was in the low thoracic or lumbar region; in only 15% did the intercostal or lumbar arteries supplying the AVM also provide a medullary artery which supplied the spinal cord. In contrast, most intradural AVM's (84%) were in the cervical or thoracic segments of the spinal cord and all of them were supplied by medullary arteries. Transit of contrast medium through the intradural AVM's was rapid in 80% of cases, suggesting high-flow lesions. Forty-four percent of the patients with AVM's of the spinal cord had associated saccular arterial or venous spinal aneurysms. No dural AV fistulas displayed these characteristics. A good outcome occurred in 88% of patients with dural AV fistulas after nidus obliteration, while 49% of patients with intramedullary AVM's did well after surgery or embolization. These findings suggest that dural and intradural AVM's differ in etiology (acquired vs. congenital) and that they have different pathophysiology, radiographic findings, clinical presentation, and response to treatment.

505 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Evidence from the present study that intracranial saccular aneurysms develop with increasing age of the patient and stabilize over a relatively short period, if they do not initially rupture, and that the likelihood of subsequent rupture decreases considerably if the initial stabilized size is less than 10 mm in diameter.
Abstract: The authors report the results of a long-term follow-up study of 130 patients with 161 unruptured intracranial saccular aneurysms. Their findings suggest that unruptured saccular aneurysms less than 10 mm in diameter have a very low probability of subsequent rupture. The mean diameter of the aneurysms that subsequently ruptured was 21.3 mm, compared with a diameter of 7.5 mm for aneurysms defined after rupture at the same institution. Part of the explanation for this discrepancy may be that the size of the filling compartment of the aneurysm decreases after rupture. There is also evidence from the present study that intracranial saccular aneurysms develop with increasing age of the patient and stabilize over a relatively short period, if they do not initially rupture, and that the likelihood of subsequent rupture decreases considerably if the initial stabilized size is less than 10 mm in diameter. Consequently, the critical size for aneurysm rupture is likely to be smaller if rupture occurs at the time of or soon after aneurysm formation. There seems to be a substantial difference in potential for growth and rupture between previously ruptured and unruptured aneurysms.

455 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The conclusion is that proximal balloon occlusion for unclippable cerebral aneurysms is a convenient, safe, and effective way of producing arterial Occlusion in these cases.
Abstract: ✓ Of 68 patients with unclippable aneurysms treated by proximal artery occlusion with detachable balloons, permanent occlusion was achieved in 65; of these patients, 37 had carotid artery aneurysms below the origin of the ophthalmic artery, 21 had aneurysms arising from the supraclinoid portion of the carotid artery, six had basilar trunk aneurysms, and one had a distal vertebral aneurysm. Examination for treatment selection included assessment of the circle of Willis by compression angiography and xenon blood flow studies, with the ultimate evaluation being test occlusion under systemic heparinization with the balloon temporarily placed in the desired position. Of 67 patients who underwent a formal occlusion test, eight with carotid artery aneurysms did not initially tolerate the occlusion test, and ischemic signs disappeared instantaneously with deflation and removal of the balloon. During test occlusion, two additional patients had ischemic events that proved to be embolic; these reversed immediately u...

401 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Twenty patients admitted for minor or moderate closed-head injury were studied to investigate the relationship between magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and neurobehavioral sequelae and found deficits in frontal lobe functioning and memory were related to the size and localization of the lesions as defined by MRI.
Abstract: ✓ Twenty patients admitted for minor or moderate closed-head injury were studied to investigate the relationship between magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and neurobehavioral sequelae. The MRI scans demonstrated 44 more intracranial lesions than did concurrent computerized tomography (CT) scans in 17 patients (85%); most of these lesions were located in the frontal and temporal regions. Estimates of lesion volume based on MRI were frequently greater than with CT; however, MRI disclosed no additional lesions that required surgical evacuation. Neuropsychological assessment during the initial hospitalization revealed deficits in frontal lobe functioning and memory that were related to the size and localization of the lesions as defined by MRI. Follow-up MRI and neuropsychological testing at 1 month (13 cases) and 3 months (six cases) disclosed marked reduction of lesion size paralleled by improvement in cognition and memory. These findings encourage further investigation of the prognostic utility of MRI for t...

373 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: While the available data suggest a favorable influence and outcome, randomized studies are needed to further optimize radiation therapy techniques and to integrate new therapeutic modalities.
Abstract: The effectiveness and complications of radiation therapy for brain neoplasms are reviewed. While the available data suggest a favorable influence and outcome, randomized studies are needed to further optimize radiation therapy techniques and to integrate new therapeutic modalities.

361 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The staged approach to giant AVM management is a proposed method to render AVM's that were previously considered inoperable or marginally operable into totally excisable lesions, while maintaining an acceptable level of morbidity and mortality.
Abstract: ✓ A series of 20 patients with giant arteriovenous malformations (AVM's) managed with staged embolization and surgical resection is presented. Complete excision was accomplished in 18 of these patients. There were no deaths and only three complications, of which one was disabling. Further evidence for the presence of low perfusion surrounding the AVM, emphasizing the risk of normal perfusion pressure breakthrough, is provided by cortical perfusion pressure, cortical cerebral blood flow (CBF), and stable xenon computerized tomography CBF measurements. The staged approach to giant AVM management is a proposed method to render AVM's that were previously considered inoperable or marginally operable into totally excisable lesions, while maintaining an acceptable level of morbidity and mortality.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In a series of 715 patients operated on by microsurgical techniques for intracranial saccularAneurysms between 1970 and 1980, part of the aneurysmal sac was not obliterated in 28 aneurYSms in 27 patients, and clinical follow-up evaluation for 8 years and angiographic follow- up studies for 6 years revealed that one aneurysism rest increased in size and bled twice.
Abstract: In a series of 715 patients operated on by microsurgical techniques for intracranial saccular aneurysms between 1970 and 1980, part of the aneurysmal sac was not obliterated in 28 aneurysms in 27 patients (3.8% of 715 cases). Clinical follow-up evaluation for 8 years (range 4 to 13 years) and angiographic follow-up studies for 6 years (range 2 to 10 years) in these 27 cases revealed that one aneurysm rest increased in size and bled twice, five were spontaneously obliterated, two decreased in size, 13 remained unchanged, and in seven cases no late follow-up angiography was performed. The incidence of rebleeding from an aneurysm rest was 3.7% of the 27 in whom the sac was not obliterated and 0.14% of all 715 patients who were operated on.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This approach offers many advantages over other anterior and lateral approaches to the lateral and posterior Cranial base: minimal brain retraction; direct access to the ipsilateral petrous and upper cervical internal carotid artery; reconstruction of extensive cranial base defects; preservation of the hearing conduction mechanism when it is not involved by tumor; and the maintenance of excellent facial nerve function postoperatively.
Abstract: A subtemporal-preauricular infratemporal fossa approach to remove 22 large neoplasms involving the lateral and posterior cranial base is detailed The areas from which a neoplasm could be removed by this approach included the sphenoid and clival bone; the medial half of the petrous temporal bone; the infratemporal fossa; the nasopharynx; the retro- and parapharyngeal area; the ethmoid, sphenoid, and maxillary sinuses; and the intradural clivus-foramen magnum area The pathology of the neoplasms included benign tumors such as meningioma, malignant cartilaginous neoplasms such as chordoma, and other malignant lesions such as nasopharyngeal carcinoma This approach offers many advantages over other anterior and lateral approaches to the lateral and posterior cranial base: these include minimal brain retraction; direct access to the ipsilateral petrous and upper cervical internal carotid artery; reconstruction of extensive cranial base defects, often with the use of a vascularized rectus abdominus flap; preservation of the hearing conduction mechanism when it is not involved by tumor; and the maintenance of excellent facial nerve function postoperatively The use of an anterior extradural approach (transethmoidal) and of an intradural approach (frontotemporal or retromastoid), either concurrently or separately, is necessary in some patients to effect total tumor removal The most serious complication in this series was the death of a patient due to postoperative infection and bilateral carotid artery rupture, which may have been avoided by the use of a rectus abdominis muscle flap for reconstruction Among the 21 surviving patients, 18 had a good outcome, two had a fair outcome, and one with preexisting neurological deficits had a poor outcome One of the surviving patients with a chordoma died of pulmonary metastases 1 year later, without evidence of local recurrence The length of postoperative follow-up evaluation in these patients is insufficient to make any judgment about the effectiveness of this surgical approach in achieving a cure or long-term control of the tumors described

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A consecutive series of 330 severely head-injured patients was studied prospectively, finding no significant difference in outcome in pediatric and adult patients with mass lesions or with increased ICP, regardless of whether or not the pressure was reducible.
Abstract: A consecutive series of 330 severely head-injured patients was studied prospectively. All of the patients were treated with the same protocols by the same physicians and staff in the same intensive care unit. All of the patients had intracranial pressure (ICP) monitoring. Of the 330 patients, 100 were in the pediatric age group (0 to 19 years of age) and 230 were in the adult group (20 to 80 years of age). Statistical analyses were performed with regard to outcome, Glasgow Coma Scale (GCS) score, ICP course, and incidence of surgical lesions. The average emergency room GCS score as well as the 24-hour GCS score for each group was the same. The percentage of patients having ICP that was normal, increased but reducible, and increased but not reducible in each group was the same. The pediatric patients had a significantly higher percentage of good outcomes (43%) than the adult patients (28%) (p less than 0.01). They also had a significantly lower mortality rate (24%) than the adult patients (45%) (p less than 0.01). At 1 year following injury, 55% of pediatric patients had a good outcome compared to 21% of adults (p less than 0.001); this trend was evident at 3 months, with the same p value. Pediatric patients with normal ICP had a higher percentage of good outcomes (70%) than the adult patients with normal ICP (48%) (p less than 0.05). There was no significant difference in outcome in pediatric and adult patients with mass lesions or with increased ICP, regardless of whether or not the pressure was reducible. There was a much higher incidence of surgical mass lesions in adult patients (46%) than in pediatric patients (24%) (p less than 0.001).

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The highest hemorrhage rate was found in patients with prior neurological history who experienced apoplectic deterioration (acute-on-chronic presentation) and only 57.1% of patients with acute deterioration in the absence of prior neurological symptoms had hemorrhages.
Abstract: A retrospective clinical and pathological review of 905 consecutive brain tumor cases (excluding pituitary adenoma and recurrent tumor) was conducted to identify cases in which intratumoral hemorrhage was confirmed grossly and/or pathologically. There were 132 cases so identified, for an overall tumor hemorrhage rate of 14.6%; of these, 5.4% were classified as macroscopic and 9.2% as microscopic. The presence of hemorrhage was correlated with the neurological presentation. The highest hemorrhage rate (70.0%) was found in patients with prior neurological history who experienced apoplectic deterioration (acute-on-chronic presentation). Only 57.1% of patients with acute deterioration in the absence of prior neurological symptoms had hemorrhages. The highest hemorrhage rate for primary brain tumors was 29.2% for mixed oligodendroglioma/astrocytoma, while the highest hemorrhage rate for any tumor type was 50% for metastatic melanoma. The clinical relevance of tumor hemorrhage is discussed.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is suggested that eliciting cerebral blood flow responses by cutaneous vibration provides a safe, rapid, and reproducible tool for locating and assessing the functional status of somatosensory cortex, and offers potential clinical and research utility.
Abstract: ✓ Positron emission tomography measurements of regional cerebral blood flow were used to detect focal neuronal activation in the first somatosensory cortex (SI) of humans induced by cutaneous vibratory stimulation. Intravenously administered water labeled with oxygen-15 (H215O) was used as a blood flow tracer to obtain five stimulated-state and two resting-state blood flow images in each of eight normal volunteers. Three cutaneous surfaces were tested: lips, fingers, and toes. Intense, highly focal SI responses were seen during all 39 stimulated-state trials. The SI responses from the three stimulation sites were anatomically distinct and formed a medial-to-lateral homonculus in every subject. Response magnitudes (increase in local blood flow) and response locales (expressed as proportionately measured bicommissural stereotaxic coordinates) were highly consistent among subjects and on repeated trials for each subject. These findings suggest that eliciting cerebral blood flow responses by cutaneous vibrati...

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors measured the blood flow velocity in the different segments of the circle of Willis with a noninvasive transcranial Doppler ultrasonography method and found a significant relationship to the source of SAH, the side of the operative approach, and the method of nimodipine administration.
Abstract: Fifty patients with ruptured aneurysms were operated on within 72 hours after the first subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH). To prevent symptomatic vasospasm, the patients were given the calcium channel blocker, nimodipine, intravenously (2 mg/hr) for 14 days and orally (60 mg four times daily) for another 7 days. At short intervals (at least every 3rd day) the blood flow velocity in the different segments of the circle of Willis was measured with a noninvasive transcranial Doppler ultrasonography method. Within the first 72 hours after SAH, the velocity was normal in the large branches of the circle of Willis and angiography revealed no signs of vasospasm. The Doppler frequency changes that relate to blood flow accelerated between Days 3 and 10, and maximum blood flow velocities were recorded between Days 11 and 20, with normalization occurring within the following 4 weeks. The changes showed a significant relationship to the source of SAH, the side of the operative approach, and the method of nimodipine administration. A comparison between the angiographically proven diameter of spastic arteries and the Doppler-measured blood flow velocity showed an inverse relationship in flow of the middle cerebral artery and the internal carotid artery that was statistically highly significant (p less than 0.001) while this correlation was only slightly significant in the A1 segment of the anterior cerebral artery (p = 0.054). Seven patients (14%) developed delayed ischemic deficits (DID's), which were all functionally reversible. One patient (2%) died as a result of decompensated vasospasm. Based on the information provided by Doppler measurement of the individual blood flow velocity changes due to vasospasm, preventive hypertensive treatment was introduced to improve the perfusion pressure while patients were still in an asymptomatic stage. Among the last 40 patients who were treated according to this regimen, reversible DID's were observed in only three patients (7.5%) and postoperative angiography to detect vasospasm was not necessary.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Seven patients with spasticity of spinal cord origin have been maintained for up to 2 years with continuous spinal intrathecal infusion of baclofen, with the greatest benefits to the patients improvement in activities of daily living and better sleep due to reduced spasms.
Abstract: ✓ Seven patients with spasticity of spinal cord origin have been maintained for up to 2 years with continuous spinal intrathecal infusion of baclofen. Prior to treatment, all of the patients had severe rigidity in their lower limbs and most had frequent and extensive spontaneous spasms, all of which greatly interfered with their activities of daily living. Oral antispasmodic medications were ineffective or caused central side effects. The patients underwent implantation of a programmable drug pump connected to a lumbar subarachnoid catheter. Within days of beginning continuous intrathecal baclofen infusion, the muscle tone was reduced to normal levels and spasms were eliminated. Over the ensuing months, muscle tone remained normal, but short-duration spasms could be induced by some activities. The greatest benefits to the patients were improvement in activities of daily living and better sleep due to reduced spasms. The baclofen doses were increased over the first few months but then were stabilized or on...

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Topographical variations of the course taken by the frontal branches of the facial nerve were studied and are described in this report.
Abstract: The pterional craniotomy as described previously by the first author requires creation of a special flap over the temporalis muscle for increased visibility. Topographical variations of the course taken by the frontal branches of the facial nerve were studied and are described in this report.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The name "desmoplastic infantile ganglioglioma" is proposed for this apparently distinct clinicopathological entity, whose massive size is indicative of a pre- or perinatal origin.
Abstract: ✓ Eleven cases of supratentorial neuroepithelial tumor presenting in infancy are reported. The tumors were characterized by their voluminous size, their intense desmoplasia, and the frequent presence of divergent astrocytic and ganglionic differentiation as demonstrated by special neurohistological and immunohisto- and immunocytochemical techniques. All the tumors presented in subjects below the age of 18 months, usually within the first 4 months of life. They most often involved the frontal and parietal regions and were composed predominantly of a dense desmoplastic tissue superficially resembling a moderately cellular fibroma. The fibroblastic elements were admixed with variable numbers of pleomorphic neuroepithelial cells. Divergent astrocytic and neuronal differentiation was demonstrable in nine of the 11 tumors. All showed astrocytic differentiation. The study of one example by electron microscopy, immunocytochemistry, and tissue culture disclosed that the astrocytic tumor cells were partly invested ...

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: More calories and protein usually can be administered to acute brain injury patients via the TPN route than by EN feedings via nasogastric or nasoduodenal routes.
Abstract: ✓ Fifty-one brain-injured patients with peak 24-hour admission Glasgow Coma Scale (GCS) scores of 4 to 10 were prospectively randomly assigned to receive total parenteral (TPN) or enteral (EN) nutrition. Patients were studied from hospital admission to 18 days postinjury. Outcome was assessed by the Glasgow Outcome Scale at 3 months, 6 months, and 1 year postinjury. The TPN group received a significantly higher cumulative mean intake of protein than the EN group (mean ± standard error of the mean: 1.35 ± 0.12 vs. 0.91 ± 0.9 gm/kg/day; p = 0.004). Mean cumulative caloric balance was also significantly higher in the TPN than in the EN group (75.6% ± 5.13% vs. 59% ± 4.26%; p = 0.02). Nitrogen balance was significantly more negative in the EN group during the 1st week postinjury (p = 0.002). The incidence of pneumonia, urinary tract infections, septic shock, and infections was not significantly different between groups. Classic nutritional assessment parameters such as anergy screens, total lymphocyte counts,...

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A re-examination of treatment methods and the timing of those treatments is needed to define the optimal management of low-grade astrocytic tumors of the cerebral hemispheres.
Abstract: The records of 60 patients with low-grade astrocytic tumors of the cerebral hemispheres treated between 1975 and 1985 were examined to evaluate the results of current treatment methods. This analysis revealed that the patient's age and tumor enhancement on computerized tomography (CT) with intravenous administration of contrast material were the only factors that influenced survival time. Compared to prior studies, the patients in this report more frequently had normal preoperative neurological examinations and total resection of their lesions. These differences may have resulted from the use of CT scans over the past decade. Earlier diagnosis and improvement definition of the tumor location and extent are two reasons why the use of CT scans may have affected outcome statistics. A re-examination of treatment methods and the timing of those treatments is needed to define the optimal management of these lesions.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Patients who have complete responses to neoadjuvant chemotherapy tolerate a significant radiotherapy dose reduction without compromising long-term survival, thereby allowing a reduction of some of the late effects of therapeutic radiation.
Abstract: A neoadjuvant (preradiotherapy) chemotherapy regimen consisting of either cyclophosphamide alone (60 to 80 mg/kg) or a modified multidrug regimen (vinblastine, bleomycin, cyclophosphamide, and cisplatin) was administered to 15 newly diagnosed patients with histologically confirmed, fully staged, primary germ-cell tumors (GCT's) of the central nervous system (CNS). There were 11 patients with germinomas and four with non-germinoma malignant GCT's. There were six females and nine males, whose median age was 13 years (range 4 months to 24 years). Seven germinoma patients (64%) had disseminated disease. For the germinoma patients, the subsequent radiotherapy dose was modified based on the response to the neoadjuvant chemotherapy, and craniospinal radiotherapy was given only to those with disseminated CNS disease at diagnosis. Ten of the 11 germinoma patients had complete disappearance of all evaluable disease after two courses of chemotherapy (cyclophosphamide in eight and multidrug in three) and one had a partial response. The planned dose of radiotherapy to the primary tumor was reduced from 5500 to 3000 rads, and the craniospinal dose was lowered from 3600 to 2000 rads. Ten patients remain in continuous disease-free remission 20+ to 89+ months after diagnosis (median follow-up period 47 months). All four patients with non-germinoma GCT's received the multidrug regimen, and two fo three patients with evaluable disease had a partial response. High-dose regional and craniospinal radiotherapy was administered thereafter, but only two patients remain in their first remission. Previously untreated germinoma is a highly chemosensitive disease and the neoadjuvant treatment strategy permits the identification of active chemotherapy regimens in newly diagnosed patients. Patients who have complete responses to neoadjuvant chemotherapy tolerate a significant radiotherapy dose reduction without compromising long-term survival, thereby allowing a reduction of some of the late effects of therapeutic radiation. Germinomas tend to disseminate early in the course of the disease and a pre-therapy staging evaluation permits individualized radiotherapy treatment planning.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The results of this study support earlier studies on the application of chronic intrathecal morphine for intractable cancer pain and indicate that, in carefully selected patients, nonmalignant pain may be managed satisfactorily with this technique.
Abstract: Forty-three patients with intractable pain received intrathecal morphine delivered by implanted continuous-infusion (Infusaid) or programmable (Medtronic) devices. In 35 patients the pain was due to cancer, and eight patients had chronic nonmalignant pain. The origin of the nonmalignant pain included lumbar arachnoiditis, multiple sclerosis, severe osteoporosis resulting in a thoracic compression fracture, and intractable pain as a consequence of cancer therapy in individuals cured of their disease. Twenty-eight (80%) of the patients with cancer-related pain experienced excellent or good relief. Side effects were rare. Tolerance occurred infrequently and could be managed effectively. The results of this study support earlier studies on the application of chronic intrathecal morphine for intractable cancer pain. These findings also indicate that, in carefully selected patients, nonmalignant pain may be managed satisfactorily with this technique.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In the 5-year period from 1978 to 1983, 1076 patients with ruptured intracranial aneurysms were admitted to the six neurosurgical departments in Denmark and were entered in a prospective consecutive study conducted by the Danish Aneurysm Study Group, resulting in 133 patients suffering at least one rebleed after their initial hemorrhage.
Abstract: In the 5-year period from 1978 to 1983, 1076 patients with ruptured intracranial aneurysms were admitted to the six neurosurgical departments in Denmark and were entered in a prospective consecutive study conducted by the Danish Aneurysm Study Group. The patients were followed with 3-month and 2-year examinations or to death. A total of 133 patients suffered at least one rebleed after their initial hemorrhage during their first stay in the neurosurgical department; these patients had a mortality rate of 80% compared to 41% for patients without a rebleed (p less than 0.0001). During the first 2 weeks after the initial insult, 102 rebleeds were registered. The daily rate of rebleeds during these 2 weeks, calculated using a life-table method, varied from 0.2% to 2.1%. The rebleed rate during the first 24 hours (Day 0) was 0.8%, and the maximum risk of rebleeding was observed between Day 4 and Day 9. Significantly fewer rebleeds were reported in patients with good clinical grades (Grades 1 to 3, Hunt Grades I and II) compared to those with poor clinical grades (Grades 4 to 9, Hunt Grades III to V: p less than 0.001).

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: These changes must not be interpreted as representing failure to provide optimal care but rather should be seen as the inevitable product of an attempt to manage patients with spinal cord and column injuries, many of which are clearly unstable.
Abstract: ~" The results are presented of a prospective study of the course of 283 spinal cord-injured patients who were consecutively admitted to five trauma centers participating in the Comprehensive Central Nervous System Injury Centers' program of the National Institutes of Health. Of the 283 patients, 14 deteriorated neurologically during acute hospital management. In 12 of the 14, the decline in neurological function could be associated with a specific management event, and in nine of these 12 the injury involved the cervical cord. Nine of the 14 patients who deteriorated had cervical injuries, three had thoracic cord injuries, and two had thoracolumbar junction injuries. Management intervention was identified as the cause of deterioration in four of 134 patients undergoing operative intervention, in three of 60 with skeletal traction application, in two of 68 with halo vest application, in two of 56 undergoing Stryker frame rotation, and in one of 57 undergoing rotobed rotation. Early surgery on the cervical spine when cord injury is present appears hazardous, since each of the three patients with a cervical cord injury who deteriorated was operated on within the first 5 days. No such deterioration was observed following surgery performed from the 6th day on. In two other patients, deterioration did not appear to be related to management but was a direct product of the underlying disease or of systemic complications. Deterioration following hospitalization for spinal cord injury is relatively uncommon -- 4.9% in this large series. In most instances, decline in function could be attributed to specific management procedures. These changes must not be interpreted as representing failure to provide optimal care but rather should be seen as the inevitable product of an attempt to manage patients with spinal cord and column injuries, many of which are clearly unstable.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The results demonstrate the therapeutic effectiveness and low incidence of side effects associated with an intensive MP dose regimen for treatment of experimental spinal cord injury and reveal a strong negative correlation between neurological recovery and size of the spinal cord cavity at 1 month.
Abstract: Beginning 30 minutes after compression trauma of the upper lumbar (L-2) spinal cord, cats were treated with either a high-dose regimen of methylprednisolone (MP) administered as the sodium salt of the 21-succinate ester (Solu-Medrol sterile powder) or the MP vehicle. Animals were randomly assigned to either treatment group (10 cats per group), and all personnel were blind as to which animals received vehicle or drug. The intensive 48-hour dosing regimen was designed to maintain therapeutic tissue levels of MP and consisted of an initial 30 mg/kg intravenous bolus of MP; 2 and 6 hours later additional 15 mg/kg MP doses were administered by intravenous bolus. Immediately following the bolus given at 6 hours, a continuous MP infusion of 2.5 mg/kg/hr was started. The infusion was stopped abruptly at 48 hours with no dose tapering. Animals in the vehicle group received an equivalent volume of MP vehicle. The total MP dose administered over 48 hours was 165 mg/kg. Animals were evaluated weekly for neurological recovery based upon a 12-point functional scale which assessed general mobility, running, and stair-climbing. Mean recovery scores at 1 month after injury (+/- standard error of the mean) were: vehicle group (seven cats) 3.7 +/- 0.9, and MP group (10 cats) 8.7 +/- 0.2; (p less than 0.001). Histological evaluation of the spinal cords revealed a strong negative correlation between neurological recovery and size of the spinal cord cavity at 1 month (r = -0.88). Three of 10 animals in the vehicle group became ill and had to be dropped from the study, whereas all of the 10 MP-treated animals survived in excellent health. The results demonstrate the therapeutic effectiveness and low incidence of side effects associated with an intensive MP dose regimen for treatment of experimental spinal cord injury.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is concluded that brachytherapy with temporarily implanted 125I sources for well-circumscribed, hemispheric, recurrent malignant gliomas is effective and offers a chance for long-term survival even though focal radiation necrosis can seriously degrade the quality of survival in a minority of patients.
Abstract: The authors report survival data for the first 41 patients treated for recurrent malignant gliomas with interstitial brachytherapy at the University of California, San Francisco (1980-1984). Iodine-125 (125I) sources were temporarily implanted using stereotaxic techniques. The median survival period for 18 patients with recurrent glioblastomas was 52 weeks after brachytherapy; two patients are alive more than 5 years after brachytherapy. The median survival period for 23 patients with recurrent anaplastic astrocytomas is 153 weeks after brachytherapy, with 10 patients alive more than 3 years and four patients alive more than 4 years after brachytherapy. Both groups did significantly better (p less than 0.01) than groups of patients with the same diagnoses and similar general characteristics who were treated at recurrence with chemotherapy alone. Because of deterioration of their clinical condition and evidence of recurrence from computerized tomographic scans, 17 (41%) of 41 patients required reoperation 20 to 72 weeks after brachytherapy. Despite the invariable presence of apparently viable tumor cells mixed with necrotic tissue in the resected specimen, nine patients have survived more than 2 years after reoperation and two of the nine are still alive 4 years after reoperation. The authors conclude that brachytherapy with temporarily implanted 125I sources for well-circumscribed, hemispheric, recurrent malignant gliomas is effective and offers a chance for long-term survival even though focal radiation necrosis can seriously degrade the quality of survival in a minority of patients.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The authors describe a technique that utilizes a direct route through the nasal cavity, thereby minimizing disruption of normal tissues.
Abstract: The transsphenoidal route to the pituitary gland is well established in neurosurgical practice, and several approaches to the sphenoidal air sinus have been described. In this paper, the authors describe a technique that utilizes a direct route through the nasal cavity, thereby minimizing disruption of normal tissues.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Analysis of the interactions of CA levels and GCS scores, duration of ventilatory assistance, and length of hospitalization revealed that the CA's either enhanced the reliability of the GCS score or were independent predictors of outcome.
Abstract: Because of the central role of the sympathetic nervous system in mediating the stress response, plasma norepinephrine (NE), epinephrine (E), and dopamine (DA) levels were measured in 61 traumatically brain-injured patients to determine whether catecholamine (CA) levels obtained within 48 hours after injury provide reliable prognostic markers of outcome. Patient outcome was determined at 1 week using the Glasgow Coma Scale (GCS) and at the time of discharge using the Glasgow Outcome Scale (GOS). Levels of NE, E, and DA correlated highly with the admission GCS score (NE: r = 0.58, p less than 0.0001; E: r = 0.46, p less than 0.0025; DA: r = 0.27, p less than 0.04). Moreover, in the 21 patients with GCS scores of 3 or 4 on admission, NE levels predicted outcome at 1 week. All six patients with NE levels less than 900 pg/ml (normal level less than 447 pg/ml) improved to GCS scores of greater than 11, while 12 of 15 with NE values greater than 900 pg/ml remained with GCS scores of 3 to 6 or died. Levels of E and DA were not as useful. Catecholamine levels also increased significantly as the GOS score worsened. Levels of NE and E were significantly higher in patients who died or remained persistently vegetative than in those with better outcomes. In the 54 patients who survived beyond 1 week, significant correlations were present between the length of hospitalization and NE (r = 0.71, p less than 0.0001) and E (r = 0.61, p less than 0.0001) levels. Concentrations of NE (r = 0.61, p less than 0.0004) and E (r = 0.48, p less than 0.01) were also highly correlated with the duration of ventilatory assistance. Analysis of the interactions of CA levels and GCS scores, duration of ventilatory assistance, and length of hospitalization revealed that the CA's either enhanced the reliability of the GCS score or were independent predictors of outcome. Thus, these findings indicate that alterations in circulating CA levels reflect the severity of the neurological insult and provide support for the use of CA measurements as a physiological marker of patient outcome in both the acute and chronic phases of traumatic brain injury.