Objectives: Pituitary adenomas (PAs), although being small tumours, can have quite an impact on patients' lives causing hormonal and visual disturbances, for which surgery must be performed. As a large peripheral hospital with specialists in pituitary surgery, an assessment of the efficacy and safety of transnasal transsphenoidal pituitary surgery was made.
Methods: A retrospective analysis of neurosurgical reports as well as pre and postoperative imaging was made to evaluate the presenting symptoms, tumoural variables, peri-operative morbidity, and long-term outcome.
Background: Anterior cervical surgery is routinely performed using fluoroscopy. Visualizing the lower cervical levels can be challenging, particularly in obese, muscular, and broad-shouldered patients. We found that grabbing both feet of the patient at the level of the metatarsals and cranially pushing the feet, creating dorsiflexion at the ankle joints, seems to increase the number of fluoroscopically visualized cervical levels.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe present two cases of spontaneous intracerebellar migration of a pseudomeningocele. This is a rarely reported complication of posterior fossa surgery with possible life threatening cerebellar mass effect. The probable mechanism is a slow but progressive cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) movement (one-way valve mechanism) into the pseudomeningocele with secondary herniation or dissection through a weakened dura into the cerebellum causing progressive or acute cerebellar dysfunction.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe authors describe the case of a patient with an intracranial capillary hemangioma, and they review the recent literature on intracranial capillary hemangiomas with special attention to their differential diagnosis and management. The only sign in this 7-week-old boy was head enlargement. There were no neurological deficits, and imaging revealed a large intracranial lesion in the right temporal fossa.
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