Publications by authors named "Likavec M"

We report a case of an ectopic, extraspinal meningioma that appeared as a midline interscapular mass in a 13-year-old girl. The tumor involved the T-2 and T-3 spinous processes, but was dorsal to the lamina and was entirely extrinsic to the spinal canal. Large amounts of tumoral calcification and reactive hyperostosis were present, radiologically mimicking an osteogenic sarcoma.

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Study Objective: Concerns exist about the effect of flexible fiberoptic bronchoscopy (FFB) on intracranial pressure (ICP). We studied the effect of FFB on cerebral hemodynamics in patients with severe head injury.

Design: Prior to FFB, patients were anesthetized and muscle relaxants were given as necessary to eliminate coughing.

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Anterior decompression and fusion is a valuable technique in the treatment of thoracolumbar burst fractures. Anterior instrumentation has evolved to correct deformity and stabilize the spinal segments during decompression and bone grafting as a single-stage procedure. One anterior device developed by Kaneda has been used in our institution since 1989.

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A 100-month retrospective review was undertaken to identify the population characteristics of patients with both facial and cranial fractures and to establish the relationships between them. A 4.4% incidence of cranial fractures was found in the 882 patients with facial fractures.

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Closed head injury (CHI) affects approximately one in five patients who sustain facial fractures. The effects can range from simple loss of consciousness to coma and death. The high incidence of CHI in the facial trauma population and the potential for mortality and neurologic morbidity make it a distinct concern of the practicing oral and maxillofacial surgeon.

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Transient neurologic deficits are an unusual presentation of chronic subdural hematoma. Presented herein are three patients with transient aphasia and right-sided sensory-motor abnormalities caused by subdural hematoma. Review of the literature revealed 32 cases similar to ours.

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One hundred closed head injuries associated with facial fractures treated over a 78-month period at a level I trauma center in Northeast Ohio were reviewed. The incidence of closed head injury in patients with facial fractures was 17.5%.

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Previous reports of computed tomographic scan with contrast myelography in cervical spinal cord injury have shown a rate of disc herniation of less than 5%. We hypothesized that injuries associated with forces adequate to cause bone or ligamentous injury in the region of the disc space could be associated with higher and more significant rates of disc herniation. Thirty-seven consecutive traumatic midcervical fracture subluxations were reviewed.

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Cervical spine fractures are a serious complication of maxillofacial trauma because of the high potential for mortality and neurologic morbidity. This study reviewed 563 patients with facial fractures treated by the Division of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery at a level I trauma center and identified 11 concomitant cervical spine fractures (2.0%).

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This immunocytochemical study was undertaken to clarify the histogenesis of ethylnitrosourea-induced rat brain tumors. The tumors induced in offspring of Sprague-Dawley rats injected with ethylnitrosourea on day 18 of gestation were used in these experiments. Controls consisted of pregnant Sprague-Dawley rats similarly injected with saline alone.

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Changes of tropomyosin isoforms have previously been found accompanying morphologic alterations such as those associated with neoplastic transformations in mammalian cells. To determine whether an isoform change is associated with the malignancy of brain tumors, we employed both polyclonal antibodies specific to high and low molecular weight tropomyosin isoforms. We found, by using immunocytochemistry and immunoblotting, that an alteration of tropomyosin isoforms is associated with human astrocytomas.

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Ubiquitin, a protein important in regulating non-lysosomal proteolysis, has previously been shown to be present in cytoskeletal inclusions of the neurodegenerative diseases. Its role in other pathological processes of the central nervous system, such as neoplastic transformation of cells, is not known. The astrocytoma, a tumor of complex biology derived from the astrocyte, is the most common primary parenchymal human brain tumor in both children and adults.

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A cellulitis surrounding a cerebrospinal fluid shunt caused by Branhamella catarrhalis is described. This is the first reported case of a cellulitis caused by this bacterium.

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Posttraumatic chronic atlantoaxial rotatory subluxation and congenital absence of the posterior arch of the atlas are rare upper cervical spine abnormalities. The present case is that of a 4-year-old girl who had these two spinal disorders as well as spastic cerebral palsy. The interrelationship, if any, between these three conditions is unclear but presented an unusual diagnostic triad.

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The effects of changes of perfusion pressure and hypothermia on the cerebral blood flow of a new isolated rat brain preparation have been studied in 7 animals. The cerebral blood flow was extremely sensitive to the mean arterial pressure of perfusion, showing little evidence of autoregulation at low pressure, and only slight evidence in hypertension. The cerebral blood flow was lower in hypothermia.

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The microsurgical preparation and high level performance with extracorporeal recipient perfusion of a stable, totally isolated rat brain model is presented. Emphasis has been placed on the use of the operating microscope, bipolar cautery and mechanical fixation units to affect a complete ablation of all non-osseous cephalic and vertebral tissues with minimal physiological disturbance of the animal as a whole. The simplified technique of recipient support circulation of the isolated brain organ achieves at least 5 h of tissue viability and function as measured by electrocortical activity, A-Vo2 differences and morphological appearance.

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A variation of an extracranial-intracranial arterial bypass is presented. The subclavian artery is used as the donor vessel and the saphenous vein as the graft; thus, a bypass to a cortical branch of the middle cerebral artery can be accomplished. The advantage of this modification is that the saphenous vein, when tunneled subcutaneously behind the ear, is positioned in a straight line from the donor to the recipient vessel.

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