Objective And Importance: Penetrating injuries of the cranium and spine are frequent to the civilian neurosurgical practice. Although a variety of unusual objects have been reported, to our knowledge, there has never been a craniocerebral or spinal injury caused by a fish. An unusual case of transoral penetration of the foramen magnum by a billed fish is described. The history, radiographic studies, and treatment are presented.
Clinical Presentation: A fisherman struck by a jumping fish initially presented with severe neck pain and stiffness, bleeding from the mouth, and a laceration in the right posterior pharynx. A computed tomographic scan of the cervical spine revealed a wedge-shaped, hyperdense object extending from the posterior pharynx into the spinal canal between the atlas and the occiput. Because of the time factor involved, the fisherman was brought directly to surgery for transoral removal of the object.
Intervention: The patient was placed under general anesthesia, and with a tonsillar retractor, a kipner, and hand-held retractors, the object was visualized and identified as a fish bill. Further dissection above the anterior aspect of the atlas permitted removal of the object by means of a grabber from an arthroscopic set. No expression of cerebrospinal fluid was noted, and a Penrose drain was placed.
Conclusion: The patient was treated under the assumption that penetrating foreign objects in continuity with the cerebrospinal fluid space and the outside environment should be removed as soon as possible. The patient was provided appropriate antibiotics to treat potential infection of normal pharyngeal flora and organisms unique to the marine environment. The patient recovered and did not experience any residual neurological deficit.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1227/01.neu.0000084081.61681.8b | DOI Listing |
World Neurosurg
January 2025
Department of Neurosurgery, Xuanwu Hospital, Capital Medical University; Spine Center, China International Neuroscience Institute (CHINA-INI); Research Center of Spine and Spinal Cord, Beijing Institute of Brain Disorders, Capital Medical University; Lab of Spinal Cord Injury and Functional Reconstruction, China International Neuroscience Institute (CHINA-INI); National Center for Neurological Disorders, Beijing, CHINA. Electronic address:
Background: Revision surgery for patients with persistent, recurrent, or progressive syringomyelia following foramen magnum decompression (FMD) for Chiari malformation I-syringomyelia (CM-SM) is not uncommon and presents both strategic and technical challenges.
Methods: We conducted a retrospective study including all patients who underwent revision Cerebellar Tonsillectomy (CTL) for CM-SM between 2003 and 2023. Additionally, we performed uni- and multivariate analyses to identify possible factors contributing to failed CTL outcomes.
Sleep Breath
January 2025
McGovern Medical School University of Texas Health, Houston, TX, USA.
Purpose: Children with achondroplasia (ACH) are at risk for sudden death in infancy due to sleep disordered breathing (SDB) and foramen magnum stenosis (FMS). Sleep studies and neuroimaging are performed in infants with ACH, but interpretation of infant studies is challenging. We sought to describe baseline data on polysomnography (PSG) indices in infants with achondroplasia as well as effects of age and surgery on these parameters.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAchondroplasia, the most prevalent short-stature disorder, is caused by missense variants overactivating the fibroblast growth factor receptor 3 (FGFR3). As current surgical and pharmaceutical treatments only partially improve some disease features, we sought to explore a genetic approach. We show that an enhancer located 29 kb upstream of mouse Fgfr3 (-29E) is sufficient to confer a transgenic mouse reporter with a domain of expression in cartilage matching that of Fgfr3.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Clin Endocrinol Metab
January 2025
Division of Orthogenetics, Department of Pediatrics, Nemours Children's Hospital, Delaware, 1600 Rockland Road, Wilmington, DE, 19803, USA.
Achondroplasia is the most common disproportionate short-stature skeletal dysplasia. Features associated with achondroplasia are rhizomelia, macrocephaly, midface hypoplasia, and typical cognition. Potential medical complications include foramen magnum stenosis, hydrocephalus, middle ear dysfunction, obstructive and central sleep apnea, spinal stenosis and genu varum.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAnimals (Basel)
December 2024
Centro de Estudos de Ciência Animal (CECA), Instituto de Ciências, Tecnologias e Agroambiente da Universidade do Porto (ICETA), Rua D. Manuel II, Apartado 55142, 4051-401 Porto, Portugal.
The aim of this preliminary study was to morphologically and dimensionally characterize the cat's olfactory bulb in the sagittal plane and to establish potential relationships with the cranial conformation, based on the study of in vivo MRI images. Midsagittal and transverse T2-weighted images of the head of 40 cats subjected to MRI were selected. For each animal, the skull index was calculated to classify the cranial conformation.
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