Publications by authors named "Dario Gandara"

Article Synopsis
  • Researchers in Spain studied a serious brain condition called spontaneous subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH) over two years to see how often it happens, how it affects people, and how many survive.
  • They looked at data from 550 patients, finding that about 21% died in the hospital and 27% within a year, but many did well after treatment.
  • The study revealed that men tended to be younger and that those living in rural areas took longer to get to the hospital; it showed that improvements in treatment are needed to reduce deaths, especially in specific populations.
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Background And Objectives: The occurrence of seizures after aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage (aSAH) is associated with a poorer functional and cognitive prognosis and less favorable quality of life. It would be of value to promptly identify patients at risk of epilepsy to optimize follow-up protocols and design preventive strategies. Our aim was to develop a predictive score to help stratify epilepsy risk in patients with aSAH.

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Syringomyelia can be associated with multiple etiologies. The treatment of the underlying causes is first-line therapy; however, a direct approach to the syrinx is accepted as rescue treatment. Any direct intervention on the syrinx requires a myelotomy, posing a significant risk of iatrogenic spinal cord (SC) injury.

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Article Synopsis
  • - The study investigates the histological reasons behind vessel wall enhancement (WE) observed in MRI scans, finding it to be a significant indicator of aneurysms likely to rupture, surpassing traditional risk assessments.
  • - Conducted at Vall d'Hebron University Hospital, the research included 132 patients with saccular intracranial aneurysms, examining their MRI results and classifying them based on symptoms and rupture status.
  • - Results indicated that WE occurred in 36.5% of aneurysms, with it being a strong predictor for symptomatic and ruptured aneurysms, linked to specific immune cell markers related to inflammation.
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Background: Cerebral revascularization is recommended for patients with moyamoya disease (MMD) with reduced cerebral perfusion reserve and recurrent or progressive ischemic events. The standard surgical treatment for these patients is a low-flow bypass with or without indirect revascularization. The use of intraoperative monitoring of the metabolic profile using analytes such as glucose, lactate, pyruvate, and glycerol has not yet been described during cerebral artery bypass surgery for MMD-induced chronic cerebral ischemia.

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Most patients with hydrocephalus are still managed with the implantation of a cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) shunt in which the CSF flow is regulated by a differential-pressure valve (DPV). Our aim in this review is to discuss some basic concepts in fluid mechanics that are frequently ignored but that should be understood by neurosurgeons to enable them to choose the most adequate shunt for each patient. We will present data, some of which is not provided by manufacturers, which may help neurosurgeons in selecting the most appropriate shunt.

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In the past decade, there has been a clear trend towards better outcomes in patients with hydrocephalus, especially those with normal pressure hydrocephalus (NPH). This is partly due to the availability of more sophisticated hardware and a better understanding of implants. However, there is little evidence to show the superiority of a specific type of valve over another.

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Objective: Spreading depolarizations (SDs) have been described in patients with ischemic and haemorrhagic stroke, traumatic brain injury, and migraine with aura, among other conditions. The exact pathophysiological mechanism of SDs is not yet fully established. Our aim in this study was to evaluate the relationship between the electrocorticography (ECoG) findings of SDs and/or epileptiform activity and subsequent epilepsy and electroclinical outcome.

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Objectives: Since the introduction of endovascular treatment for cerebral aneurysms, hospitals in which subarachnoid hemorrhage is treated show different availability and/or preferences towards both treatment modalities. The main aim is to evaluate the clinical and angiographic results according to the hospital's treatment preferences applied.

Methods: This study was conducted based on use of the subarachnoid hemorrhage database of the Vascular Pathology Group of the Spanish Neurosurgery Society.

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Self-report measures, particularly symptom inventories, are critical tools for identifying patients with persistent post-concussion symptoms and their follow-up. Unlike in military or sports-related assessment, in general civilian settings pre-injury levels of concussion-like symptoms are lacking. Normative data are available in adolescent and college populations, but no reference data exist to guide clinical adult explorations.

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We describe a new, elegant, two-phase, microsurgical method that minimizes the surgical preparation time for different complex vascular lesions in a swine model. In the first phase, the model is prepared microsurgically in the experimental laboratory using arterial or/and venous grafts. In the second phase, the model is implanted in the experimental animal.

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Brain contusions (BCs) are one of the most frequent lesions in patients with moderate and severe traumatic brain injury (TBI). BCs increase their volume due to peri-lesional edema formation and/or hemorrhagic transformation. This may have deleterious consequences and its mechanisms are still poorly understood.

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Introduction: Cerebral revascularization techniques are an indispensable tool in the current armamentarium of vascular neurosurgeons. We present revascularization surgery experience and results in both moyamoya disease and occlusive cerebral ischaemia.

Patients And Methods: Patients with ischaemic occlusive disease and moyamoya disease who underwent microsurgical revascularization between October 2014 and September 2017 were analysed.

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A case of a non-traumatic giant aneurysm of the middle meningeal artery is presented in a 59-year-old patient with a history of liver transplantation, liver cirrhosis and hepatocarcinoma, chronic renal disease, hypertension and chronic bronchitis who presented with tonic-clonic seizures. CT and MRI showed a lesion suggestive of metastasis without ruling out a glial type tumor. He was operated through a left FT craniotomy.

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Background: Stereotactic biopsy is a minimally invasive technique that allows brain tissue samples to be obtained with low risk. Classically, different techniques have been used to identify the biopsy site after surgery.

Objective: To describe a technique to identify the precise location of the target in the postoperative CT scan using the injection of a low volume of air into the biopsy cannula.

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Background And Purpose: Interspecies variability and poor clinical translation from rodent studies indicate that large gyrencephalic animal stroke models are urgently needed. We present a proof-of-principle study describing an alternative animal model of malignant infarction of the middle cerebral artery (MCA) in the common pig and illustrate some of its potential applications. We report on metabolic patterns, ionic profile, brain partial pressure of oxygen (PtiO2), expression of sulfonylurea receptor 1 (SUR1), and the transient receptor potential melastatin 4 (TRPM4).

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Traumatic brain injury (TBI) and ischemic stroke cause a variable disruption of ionic homeostasis and massive ionic fluxes with subsequent osmotic water movement across the cells that causes edema, brain swelling, and deformation of the damaged tissue. Although cerebral microdialysis (CMD) has been used to study the brain neurochemistry, the ionic profiles of brain interstitial space fluid have rarely been reported in humans. We studied the ionic profile in injured areas of the brain by using CMD.

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Aim: To describe the outcomes and complication rates in 236 patients with idiopathic normal pressure hydrocephalus (INPH) after treatment.

Patients And Methods: Among a cohort of 257 patients with suspected INPH, 244 were shunted and 236 were followed up at 6 months after shunting (145 men [61.4%] and 91 women [38.

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