Background: We report on the first use of a digital 3-dimensional (3D) exoscope equipped with a 5-aminolevulinic acid (5-ALA) fluorescence visual system.
Methods: We conducted a prospective clinical trial to evaluate the utility and sensitivity/specificity of the Olympus Orbeye 3D digital exoscope when used to visualize 5-ALA-induced fluorescence in patients with high-grade glioma undergoing a clinically indicated craniotomy. At least 2 tissue samples were each obtained from regions of strong, weak.
Although surgical resection of the solid tumor component of glioblastoma has been shown to provide a survival advantage, it will never be a curative procedure. Yet, systemically applied adjuvants (radiation therapy and chemotherapy) also are not curative and their options are limited by the inability of most agents to cross the blood-brain barrier. Direct delivery of adjuvant therapies during a surgical procedure potentially provides an approach to bypass the blood-brain barrier and effectively treat residual tumor cells.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Extramedullary disease in multiple myeloma often portends a worse diagnosis. In approximately 1% of cases, multiple myeloma may metastasize to the central nervous system as either leptomeningeal involvement or an intracranial, intraparenchymal lesion. Spinal cord metastases, however, are exceedingly rare.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPseudohypoxic brain swelling (or the more recent term, postoperative intracranial hypotension-associated venous congestion) is a rare and potentially deadly complication that can occur after routine spine or brain surgery. The mechanism of this injury has been described as a rapid cerebral spinal fluid drainage leading to venous cerebral congestion. The clinical and radiographic findings mimic those found in a patient who has suffered an anoxic brain injury.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe Hill-Sachs lesion is an impression fracture of the posterolateral margin of the humeral head that commonly results from impaction with the anterior glenoid rim during subluxation or dislocation of the shoulder. This bony defect has been implicated as an etiology of recurrent instability of the shoulder. The "remplissage" technique described by Wolf is an arthroscopic method of filling the Hill-Sachs defect via infraspinatus tenodesis and posterior capsulodesis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThis prospective study determined whether single-row anchor fixation would reliably improve clinical outcome and maintain structural integrity after arthroscopic repair of single-tendon and 2-tendon rotator cuff tears. In 39 patients, 21 shoulders had single-tendon tears and 18 had 2-tendon tears. Mean follow-up was 38 months (minimum, 24 months).
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