(1) Background: Surgery for Chiari I malformation (CMI) is indicated when typical clinic-radiological features (syringomyelia, exertional headaches, sleep apnea syndrome, and tetraparesis) are present. Sometimes, patients have atypical complaints suggestive of otolaryngological (ENT) involvement, and it is sometimes difficult for the neurosurgeon to determine if these complaints are related to the CMI. Our aim was to describe postural control patterns in children with CMI using computerized dynamic posturography.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAim: To explore - through intraoperative neurophysiology mapping and recordings - the comparative distribution of the reflexive excitability of the L2 to S2 radiculo-metameric segments of the spinal cord in a series of children with bilateral spastic cerebral palsy (CP) who underwent selective dorsal rhizotomy (SDR).
Method: Our series included 46 consecutive children (36 males, 10 females; aged 5-16 years, mean 8 years) who underwent SDR, using keyhole interlaminar dorsal rhizotomy. The procedure allowed access to all L2 to S2 roots independently, while preserving the posterior architecture of the lumbar spine.
Introduction: Chiari I malformation (CM1) is an anatomical abnormality characterised by the cerebellar tonsils descending at least 5 mm below the foramen magnum. CM1 causes obstruction of cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) circulation as well as direct compression on the brainstem, thus causing typical consequences (syringomyelia), and typical clinical features (characteristic headaches and neurological impairment). Surgery is the only available treatment, indicated when symptomatology is present.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Dorsal rhizotomy is considered the gold standard for treating spastic diplegia/quadriplegia in children with cerebral palsy, when rehabilitation programs reveal insufficient to control excess of spasticity.
Method: The Keyhole Interlaminar Dorsal rhizotomy modality has been developed to access-individually-all L2-S2 roots, intradurally at the corresponding dural sheath, and preserve the posterior spine architecture. Intraoperative neuromonitoring consists of stimulating each ventral root, to verify its myotomal innervation, and dorsal roots, to explore their reflexive muscular responses in order to help determination of the proportion of rootlets to be cut.
Background: In conus medullaris and cauda equina surgery, identification of the sacral nerve roots may be uncertain in spite of their anatomical/radiological landmarks. Mapping the sacral roots by recording the muscular responses to their stimulation may benefit from EMG recording of the External Anal sphincter (EAS) in addition to the main muscular groups of the lower limbs.
Method: In a consecutive series of 27 lumbosacral dorsal rhizotomy (DRh), authors carried out a prospective study on the reliability of the EMG recording of the EAS for identification of the S1 and S2 sacral roots.
Introduction: After diagnosis of an antenatal monoventricular hydrocephalus caused by a cystic lesion of the foramen of Monro, treatment modality and time frame may be difficult to assess. Previously, this type of hydrocephalus was often treated with internal shunting. The advent of neuroendoscopy has changed the surgical management of this pathology.
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