Publications by authors named "Victor Ramzes Chavez-Herrera"

Article Synopsis
  • - The management of multiple intracranial aneurysms is complex, influenced by factors such as the patient's health, aneurysm characteristics, and surgical expertise.
  • - There is an increased risk of rupture during surgery for a ruptured aneurysm, and patients with multiple aneurysms are typically treated through multiple procedures rather than a single intervention.
  • - A case study is presented involving a 58-year-old woman with five incidental aneurysms who underwent successful clipping surgery without neurological deficits and approved the use of her images for publication.
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Background: Cerebrospinal fluid leak after endoscopic skull base surgery remains a significant complication. Several investigators have suggested Hydroset cranioplasty to reduce leak rates. We investigated our early experience with Hydroset and compared the rate of nasal complications and CSF leak rates with case-controlled historic controls.

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Pituitary adenomas are slow-growing, benign intracranial tumors that can be characterized as functional (hormone-producing) or non-functional (non-hormone producing). Symptoms therefore arise from either endocrinologic abnormalities or mass effect on surrounding structures resulting in symptoms such as visual impairment and headache. In the last two decades, technical innovations have shifted surgical resection of such adenomas to endoscopic endonasal approaches.

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The middle fossa, cavernous sinus, and paraclival triangles consist of ten triangles. Their use in a surgical approach is vast; most are used as landmarks to access and identify other structures of surgical interest. Multiple labels, borders, and contents mentioned by different authors make understanding and reproduction challenging and confusing.

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Background: Cedecea lapagei bacterium was discovered in 1977 but was not known to be pathogenic to humans until 2006. In the medical literature there are very few clinical case reports of Cedecea lapagei; none have reported a catastrophic death secondary to a soft tissue hemorrhagic bullae infection. As well as soft tissue infection, rare cases of pneumonia, urinary tract infections, peritonitis, osteomyelitis, bacteremia, and sepsis have been documented with the majority having good outcomes.

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