The development of brain metastases represents an ominous event for patients with colorectal cancer. We evaluated results following stereotactic radiosurgery (SR) for patients with metastatic ...colorectal cancer to identify efficacy of SR and prognostic factors for survival.
This is a retrospective study of 60 brain metastases from colorectal cancer in 35 consecutive patients who underwent SR from January 1993 to December 1996. Thirteen patients also underwent additional whole-brain radiation therapy (WBRT). The median dose delivered to the tumor margin was 20 Gray (range 16-28 Gy), in most cases the tumor enclosing the 50% isodose (range 40-60%). Patients were classified into two groups: SR with and SR without WBRT. Univariate and multivariate testing was performed to determine significant prognostic factors.
The median survival time was 6 months after SR and 40 months after diagnosis of primary tumor. A Karnofsky performance scale >70 was a significantly favorable prognostic factor in uni- and multivariate testing. Post-SR imaging was evaluated in 32 patients and in 54 cerebral lesions. Local tumor control was revealed in 94% of patients and 96% of treated tumors. Two patients developed local recurrences, and remote brain disease was revealed in five. No patient experienced a new focal neurologic deficit due to SR. The addition of WBRT to SR did not improve survival and local tumor control rates. Distant control rate was borderline in univariate analysis and significantly improved for patients who received additional WBRT in multivariate analysis.
SR for brain metastases from colorectal cancer results in a high local tumor control rate of 94% associated with few complications and therefore provides patients with a higher quality of their remaining life.
Retrospective outcome measurement study.
Patients suffering from malignant tumour disease and metastases to the spine develop a variety of clinical complaints including radicular symptoms and/or ...spinal cord compression syndromes. Palliative decompressive laminectomy with total or partial tumour resection is an acknowledged method of treatment, despite controversy.
The Department of Neurosurgery of the University of Vienna.
Patients suffering from metastases with predominant infiltration of the dorsal epidural parts, or patients who could not be operated on via an anterior approach, were included. Eighty-four patients who met these criteria underwent decompressive laminectomy with total or partial tumour removal. The study analyzed motor function, pain relief and continence in a 2- and 4-month post-operative follow-up. According to the criteria of motor performance, 20% of the patients had been mobile pre-operatively.
In the immediate post-operative period 45%, after 2 months 33% and after 4 months 26%, were considered mobile. None of the paraplegic patients showed functional improvement. The median survival time was 6.5 months. Pre-operatively, 56% of the patients had shown continence dysfunction. Post-operatively, 38%, and after 2 months 46% of the patients, developed continence disorders. A significant reduction in analgesic medication was also observed in the post-operative period.
In our series, palliative laminectomy with total or subtotal tumour reduction in patients with malignant spinal metastatic disease resulted in amelioration of motor function, pain and continence and therefore improved the patients' quality of life. The improvement in quality of life shows that this method is a valuable option in neurosurgical therapy, except for cases with pre-operative paraplegia. However, in patients with severe pre-operative paraparesis, the authors recommend laminectomy only in very exceptional cases, because of the poor post-operative neurological results.
Extreme acceleration and deceleration forces as well as axial loading are exerted at the occipito-cervical junction of drivers involved in high-velocity motor vehicle accidents, especially with ...fastened seatbelts. Injury at this level, usually lethal, can go unrecognized despite modern emergency management of the unconscious patient. A precise neurologic and radiographic workup of damage to this area is often not possible or overlooked in the initial phase of such severe trauma. We describe a patient with multiple injuries who sustained a left vertebral artery occlusion associated with a left-sided lateral mass fracture of C1 and a basilar artery occlusion resulting in a locked-in syndrome after an automobile accident.
This study was performed to assess the impact of gamma knife radiosurgery (RS) in the treatment of glomus jugulare tumors. Between February 1993 and February 1999, thirteen patients (9 women, 4 men; ...mean age 63.5 years, range 29 to 79 years) underwent stereotactic radiosurgery for glomus jugulare tumors with the Leksell Gamma Knife at the Neurosurgical Department of the University of Vienna. Four patients, mean age 74.5 years, range 67 to 79 years, underwent radiosurgery as the only treatment. Nine patients received radiosurgery as adjuvant therapy after previous treatment had failed: surgical resection in 9 patients and additional fractionated external beam radiation in two of these patients. Pretreatment evaluation included the staging of all tumors according to the Fisch Classification: De1 (7), De2 (1), Di1 (4) and Di2 (1). The mean follow-up period was 4.2 years, range 0.7 to 6.7 years. Ten patients, 77 %, were treated prior to 1997, the mean follow-up period being 5 years. Six patients showed no clinical changes, while six experienced an improvement of their clinical symptoms and neurological deficits. One patient was lost to follow-up. Radiation-induced transient cranial nerve neuropathies were observed in two patients. Serial MRI scans revealed tumor control in all patients, with unaltered tumor size in 10 and shrinkage in three patients. The results indicate that RS is an attractive treatment option for glomus jugulare tumors and will occupy an increasingly important role in the management of these tumors in selected patients.
Not only the pathology but also the neurosurgical procedure itself can lead to an impairment of cerebral structures. This may cause neurological symptoms like confusion, disorientation or cognitive ...deficits which have hardly been noticed until now. Neuroprotective substances can help to reduce this. As an example of the effectiveness, based on our own experiences and international trials, two different medical drugs, Nimodipine and Cerebrolysin, are presented. In conclusion one has to realize that nowadays neurosurgeons have to focus their interest more and more to neuroprotective adjuvant treatment possibilities.
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•Multilocus phylogeny of Lates contradicts morphology-based phylogenetic hypotheses.•Extant African lates perches are a monophylum that started to diversify ~2–4.5 MYA.•The nile perch ...comprises three divergent, geographically restricted lineages.•The nile perch is paraphyletic with respect to the four Lake Tanganyika Lates species.•Lates colonized and radiated in Lake Tanganyika more recently than other fishes.
Lates perches of the genus Lates (Latidae) are large piscivorous fishes, with a strikingly disjunct distribution range in coastal areas and estuaries of the Indo-Pacific region and in some large African freshwater systems. Previous phylogenetic hypotheses based on osteological and ontogenetic data suggested paraphyly of the African representatives, or even the small Lake Tanganyika species assemblage, with respect to the remaining Lates species. Based on a multilocus phylogeny, however, we show that extant African lates perches are monophyletic. The Nile perch, L. niloticus, which is widely distributed in the Nilo-Sudan region and Central Africa, comprises three distinct lineages and is paraphyletic with respect to the four endemic Lake Tanganyika species. We find that diversification of extant African Lates happened only as recently as the Pliocene. With the extensive, in part much older fossil record, this suggests repeated extinction and (re-)colonization of hydrological systems. We further find that Lates started to diversify in Lake Tanganyika only in the Pleistocene, which is much more recent than other fish radiations endemic to Lake Tanganyika, implying that they radiated in the presence of other top predators already in this ecosystem.
There are only a few long-term studies on microsurgical disc operations, and none concentrated on long-term follow-up of therapy-resistant sciatica. A total of 258 patients whose only neurologic ...symptoms were sciatica were included in this study. Patients were operated on between 1990 and 1997. All outcome results have been performed by an independent reviewer. The mean follow-up period was 7.3 years (range 4-11 years). At follow-up 25% of the patients were free of pain, 66% demonstrated marked improvement, and 9% had either no improvement or worsening of pain. At follow-up 65% of the patients reported returning to their original occupation or being able to go into retirement without hindrance. A total of 15% required changing of profession following discectomy (75% of these patients applying for early retirement were rejected), 6% were incapacitated and unable to work, and 14% were forced into early retirement. Patients with a history of sciatica longer than 3 months acquired failed back surgery syndrome considerably more often than those <3 months (p = 0.005).
A retrospective assessment of 809 patients operated on in 1990-1998 was performed. A patient-based outcome questionnaire also was incorporated into the study. The outcome was graded according to the ...Functional Economic Rating scale. A total of 64% of the patients were relieved of their complaints 3.2-10.2 years (median 6.3 years) after lumbar disc surgery. An excellent outcome, defined as Prolo scale of 9 or 10, was achieved in 55.8%, a good outcome (Prolo scale 7 or 8) in 20.7%, a fair outcome (Prolo scale 5 or 6) in 11.4%, and a poor outcome (Prolo scale of </=4) in 12.1% of the patients. Patients with strenuous occupations had a significantly (P = 0.004) less favorable outcome than patients with less strenuous or sedentary occupations. Criteria for evaluating the results of treating lumbar spinal disorders vary widely. A more universal acceptance of common criteria for judging the outcome of spinal operations should facilitate comparisons among various methods of treatment.
Stereotactic radiosurgery (SR) is being used with increasing frequency in the treatment of brain metastases. This study provides data from a clinical experience with radiosurgery in the treatment of ...cases with multiple metastases and identifies parameters that may be useful in the proper selection and therapy of these patients. From January 1993 to April 1997, 97 patients (43 women and 54 men; median age 58 years) suffering from multiple brain metastases (median 3; range 2-4) in MRI scans, received SR with the Gamma Knife. The median dose at the tumor margin was 20 Gy (range 17-30 Gy). Median tumor volume was 3900 cmm (range 100-10,000). Different forms of hemiparesis, focal and generalized seizures, cognitive deficit, headache, dizziness and ataxia had been the predominant neurological symptoms. Major histologies included lung carcinoma (44%), breast cancer (21%), renal cell carcinoma (10%), colorectal cancer (8%), and melanoma (7%). The median survival time was 6 months after SR. The actual one-year survival rate was 26%. In univariate and multivariate analysis, a higher Karnofsky performance rating and absence of extracranial metastases had a significantly positive effect on survival. Local tumor control was achieved in 94% of the patients. Complications included the onset of peritumoral edema (n = 5) and necrosis (n = 1). SR induces a significant tumor remission accompanied by neurological improvement and, therefore, provides the opportunity for prolonged high quality survival. We conclude that radiosurgical treatment of multiple brain metastases leads to an equivalent rate of survival when compared to the historic experience of patients treated with whole brain radiotherapy. Patients presenting initially with a higher Karnofsky performance rating and without extracranial metastases had a median survival time of nine months. Each such case should therefore be evaluated based on these factors to determine an optimal treatment regimen.
We analysed seventeen patients with septic postoperative spondylodiscitis (POD) who were managed by early microsurgical removal of the infected necrotic tissue, application of a closed ...suction-irrigation system (for a mean of 6.7 days), and early mobilisation. The POD was diagnosed clinically by elevated erythrocyte sedimentation rate (ESR) or C-reactive protein (CRP) values and radiographically by computerised tomography scanning or magnetic resonance imaging. According to the sensitivity studies of the obtained pathogens, systemic antibiotics were given, followed by early mobilisation of all patients in a light cast corset. Immediate pain relief was noted in all patients except one, who required a third operation that was followed by rapid clinical improvement. Bacteriological diagnosis was obtained in 88% of the patients. Excellent or good clinical long-term results were achieved in 82% of the patients, whereas 18% had poor results. Elevated ESR/CRP values returned to normal ranges within 6 to 44 days (mean 15 days) after reoperation. All but one patient tolerated early mobilisation (within 2 to 4 weeks) well without any complication. Early microsurgical removal of the necrotic and infected tissue and application of a closed suction-irrigation system supported by specific antibiotic therapy should be considered an effective means to treat POD, thereby avoiding a prolonged period of unpleasant immobilisation for the patient.