In a single-center, randomized trial involving 361 patients, the use of routine computed tomography after the removal of a chronic hematoma had no advantage over CT performed only in patients with ...clinical deterioration.
Background:
Early diagnosis of delayed cerebral ischemia (DCI) in patients after aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage (aSAH) still poses a leading problem in neurointensive care. The aim of this study ...was to analyze the effect of oral Nimodipine administration on systemic blood pressure in patients with evolving DCI compared to patients without DCI.
Methods:
Systolic (SBP), mean (MAP), and diastolic (DBP) blood pressures were analyzed at the time of Nimodipine administration and additionally 30, 60, and 120 min thereafter on days 1, 3, and 5 after aSAH. Additionally, the 24 h period preceding DCI and in patients without DCI day 10 after aSAH were analyzed. Statistical analysis was performed for SBP, MAP and DBP at time of Nimodipine administration and for the maximal drop in blood pressure after Nimodipine administration.
Results:
Thirty patients with aSAH were retrospectively analyzed with 17 patients developing DCI (“DCI”) and 13 patients who did not (“Non-DCI”). DCI patients showed a more pronounced rise in MAP and DBP over the examined time period as well as a higher decrease in SBP following Nimodipine administration. A fall of 18 mmHg in SBP after Nimodipine administration showed a sensitivity of 82.4% and specificity of 92.3% for occurrence of DCI.
Conclusion:
An increase of MAP and DBP after aSAH and a heightened sensitivity to Nimodipine administrations may serve as additional biomarkers for early detection of evolving DCI.
Background
Chronic subdural hematoma (cSDH) is a disease affecting mainly elderly individuals. The reported incidence ranges from 2.0/100,000 to 58 per 100,000 person-years when only considering ...patients who are over 70 years old, with an overall incidence of 8.2–14.0 per 100,000 persons. Due to an estimated doubling of the population above 65 years old between 2000 and 2030, cSDH will become an even more significant concern. To gain an overview of cSDH hospital admission rates, treatment, and outcome, we performed this multicenter national cohort study of patients requiring surgical treatment of cSDH.
Methods
A multicenter cohort study included patients treated in 2013 in a Swiss center accredited for residency. Demographics, medical history, symptoms, and medication were recorded. Imaging at admission was evaluated, and therapy was divided into burr hole craniostomy (BHC), twist drill craniostomy (TDC), and craniotomy. Patients' outcomes were dichotomized into good (mRS, 0–3) and poor (mRS, 4–6) outcomes. A two-sided
t
-test for unpaired variables was performed, while a chi-square test was performed for categorical variables, and a
p
-value of <0.05 was considered to be statistically significant.
Results
A total of 663 patients were included. The median age was 76 years, and the overall incidence rate was 8.2/100,000. With age, the incidence rate increased to 64.2/100,000 in patients aged 80–89 years. The most prevalent symptoms were gait disturbance in 362 (58.6%) of patients, headache in 286 (46.4%), and focal neurological deficits in 252 (40.7%). CSDH distribution was unilateral in 478 (72.1%) patients, while 185 presented a bilateral hematoma with no difference in the outcome. BHC was the most performed procedure for 758 (97.3%) evacuations. CSDH recurrence was noted in 104 patients (20.1%). A good outcome was seen in almost 81% of patients. Factors associated with poor outcomes were age, GCS and mRS on admission, and the occurrence of multiple deficits present at the diagnosis of the cSDH.
Conclusion
As the first multicenter national cohort-based study analyzing the disease burden of cSDH, our study reveals that the hospital admission rate of cSDH was 8.2/100,000, while with age, it rose to 64.2/100,000. A good outcome was seen in 81% of patients, who maintained the same quality of life as before the surgery. However, the mortality rate was 4%.
The COVID-19 pandemic raised major challenges to the management of patient flows and medical staff resource allocation. To prevent the collapse of medical facilities, elective diagnostic and surgical ...procedures were drastically reduced, canceled or rescheduled.
We recorded all in-hospital treated patients and outpatient clinics visits of our neurosurgical department from March 2017 to February 2021. Changes of OR capacity, in-hospital neurosurgical treatments and outpatient clinics visits during the pandemic episode was compared on a monthly bases to the previous years.
A total of 3′214 data points from in-house treated patients and 11′400 outpatient clinics visits were collected. The ratio of elective (73.5% ± 1.5) to emergency surgeries (26.5% ± 1.5) remained unchanged from 2017 to 2021. Significantly less neurosurgical interventions were performed in April 2020 (−42%), significantly more in July 2020 (+36%). Number of outpatient clinics visits remained in the expected monthly range (mean n = 211 ± 67). Total OR capacity was reduced to 30% in April 2020 and 55% in January 2021. No significant delay of urgent surgical treatments was detected during restricted (<85%) OR capacity. On average, the delay of rescheduled consultations was 58 days (range 3 – 183 days), three (6.5%) were referred as emergencies.
Dynamic monitoring and adjustment of resources is essential to maintain surgical care. The sharp restrictions of surgical activities resulted in significant fluctuations and 5% decrease of treated neurosurgical patients during the COVID-19 pandemic. However, urgent neurosurgical care was assured without significant time delay during periods of reduced OR capacity.
The basic set of a cranial instrument tray is filled with eponyms of surgical instruments named after surgeons and physicians from all corners of the medical world. These include pioneers like ...Castroviejo, Doyen, Frazier, Gigli, Mayfield, Raney, Weitlaner, and Yaşargil. These innovators have always strived to enhance and simplify procedures, ultimately shaping the way we perform surgery today. It was a process, which took several generations of surgeons and trials of instruments before its current form could be established. In this paper, the authors provide background information through a historical perspective on the pioneering surgeons and physicians, after whom the instruments were named. Data were collected by searching PubMed, Google Scholar/Books, Google, and the HathiTrust Digital Library. Additional information was obtained via personal contact with American and European medical institutions, libraries, museums, as well as with the surgeons' family members and their perspective foundations. Remembering the life stories of the inventors behind commonly used eponyms in the operating theater reminds us of the long history of even the most rudimentary neurosurgical tool. This unrelenting strive for perfection reminds us, as surgeons, of our duty to continuously assess and improve our surgical tools and processes for the benefit of our patients.
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE:The purpose of this study was to assess nationwide incidence and outcomes of aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage (aSAH). The Swiss SOS (Swiss Study on Subarachnoid Hemorrhage) ...was established in 2008 and offers the unique opportunity to provide this data from the point of care on a nationwide level.
METHODS:All patients with confirmed aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage admitted between January 1, 2009 and December 31, 2014, within Switzerland were recorded in a prospective registry. Incidence rates were calculated based on time-matched population data. Admission parameters and outcomes at discharge and at 1 year were recorded.
RESULTS:We recorded data of 1787 consecutive patients. The incidence of aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage in Switzerland was 3.7 per 100 000 persons/y. The number of female patients was 1170 (65.5%). With a follow-up rate of 91.3% at 1 year, 1042 patients (58.8%) led an independent life according to the modified Rankin Scale (0–2). About 1 in 10 patients survived in a dependent state (modified Rankin Scale, 3–5; n=185; 10.4%). Case fatality was 20.1% (n=356) at discharge and 22.1% (n=391) after 1 year.
CONCLUSIONS:The current incidence of aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage in Switzerland is lower than expected and an indication of a global trend toward decreasing admissions for ruptured intracranial aneurysms.
REGISTRATION:URLhttps://www.clinicaltrials.gov. Unique identifierNCT03245866.
Purpose
It is assumed that the width of the optic nerve sheath diameter (ONSD) is dependent on intracranial pressure (ICP) and pulsatility and thus constitutes a non-invasively accessible “window” ...for qualitative assessment of ICP. Data on the correlation to invasively measured ICP in children are scarce and have often been obtained from sedated patients in intensive care unit (ICU) or intraoperatively. We report on a mixed cohort of pediatric neurosurgical patients, ICP and ONSD measurements were available from both sedated and awake children, only a minority from ICU patients.
Methods
Seventy-two children were investigated. Ultrasound ONSD determination was performed immediately prior to invasive ICP measurement and the mean binocular ONSD was compared with ICP. The investigations were performed in children awake, sedated, or under general anesthesia.
Results
In the entire patient cohort, the correlation between ONSD and ICP was good (
r
= 0.52,
p
< 0.01). Children > 1 year revealed a better correlation (
r
= 0.63;
p
< 0.01) and those ≤ 1 year did worse (
r
= 0.21). Infants with open fontanelle had no correlation. In the entire cohort, the best ONSD cut-off value for detecting ICP ≥ 15 and ≥ 20 mmHg was 5.28 and 5.57 mm (OR 22.5 and 7.2, AUC 0.782 and 0.733).
Conclusion
Transorbital ultrasound measurement of ONSD is a reliable non-invasive technique to assess increased ICP in children in every clinical situation; however, the impact of age and fontanelle status needs to be considered
.
ONSD thresholds enable qualitative first orientation regarding ICP categories with a very satisfying diagnostic accuracy.
Microsurgical suturing is the standard for cerebral bypass surgery, a technique where temporary occlusion is usually necessary. Non-occlusive techniques such as excimer laser-assisted non-occlusive ...anastomosis (ELANA) have certainly widened the spectrum of treatment of complex cerebrovascular situations, such as giant cerebral aneurysms, that were otherwise non-treatable. Nevertheless, the reduction of surgical risks while widening the spectrum of indications, such as a prophylactic cerebral bypass, is still a main aim, that we would like to pursue with our sutureless tissue fusion research. The primary concern in sutureless tissue fusion- and especially in tissue fusion of cerebral vessels- is the lack of reproducibility, often caused by variations in the thermal damage of the vessel. This has prevented this novel fusion technique from being applicable in daily surgical use. In this overview, we present three ways to further improve the laser tissue soldering technique.
In the first section entitled “Laser Tissue Soldering Using a Biodegradable Polymer,” a porous polymer scaffold doped with albumin (BSA) and indocyanine green (ICG) is presented, leading to strong and reproducible tensile strengths in tissue soldering. Histologies and future developments are discussed.
In the section “Numerical Simulation for Improvement of Laser Tissue Soldering,” a powerful theoretical simulation model is used to calculate temperature distribution during soldering. The goal of this research is to have a tool in hand that allows us to determine laser irradiation parameters that guarantee strong vessel fusion without thermally damaging the inner structures such as the intima and endothelium.
In a third section, “Nanoparticles in Laser Tissue Soldering,” we demonstrate that nanoparticles can be used to produce a stable and well-defined spatial absorption profile in the scaffold, which is an important step towards increasing the reproducibility. The risks of implanting nanoparticles into a biodegradable scaffold are discussed.
Step by step, these developments in sutureless tissue fusion have improved the tensile strength and the reproducibility, and are constantly evolving towards a clinically applicable anastomosis technique.
Purpose
Previous studies correlating ultrasound (US)-based optic nerve sheath diameter (ONSD) and intracranial pressure (ICP) in children were performed under general anesthesia. To apply ONSD in ...daily clinical routine, it is necessary to investigate patients awake. It is furthermore essential for ICP-assessment with ONSD to know if ONSD-ICP correlation varies within individuals. In this study, we report on the influence of wakefulness, method of ICP measurement, intraindividual correlations, and dynamic changes of ONSD and ICP after ICP decreasing therapy.
Methods
The overall study included 72 children with a median age of 5.2 years. US ONSD determination was performed immediately prior to invasive ICP measurement, and the mean binocular ONSD was compared to ICP. In 10 children, a minimum of 3 ONSD/ICP measurements were performed to investigate a correlation within subjects. In 30 children, measurements were performed before and after therapy.
Results
Twenty-eight children were investigated awake with an excellent correlation of ONSD and ICP (
r
= 0.802,
p
< 0.01). In 10 children, at least three simultaneous ONSD and ICP measurements were performed. The intraindividual correlations were excellent (
r
= 0.795–1.0) however with strongly differing individual regression curves. The overall correlation within subjects was strong (
r
= 0.78,
p
< 0.01). After ICP decreasing therapy, all ONSD values decreased significantly (
p
< 0.01); however, there was no correlation between ∆ICP and ∆ONSD.
Conclusion
Awake investigation does not impair the correlation between ONSD and ICP. Even if there is a good overall ONSD-ICP correlation, every individual has its own distinctive and precise correlation line. The relationship between ONSD and ICP is furthermore not uniform between individuals. Strong ICP decreases can lead to smaller ONSD changes and vice versa. This should be kept in mind when using this technique in the clinical daily routine.