Severe IVH often results in a poor outcome. Currently, EVD is a standard treatment for IVH, but there is little research to show whether using ultrasound to guide the catheter placement improves outcome. Patients with severe IVH who had iUS-guided EVD (the iUS-guided group) were enrolled retrospectively and compared with a group who had EVD performed without ultrasound guidance (the control group) from January 2016 to July 2022. Data were collected on accuracy of the catheter placement, complications and outcome at 3 months assessed by mRS. The accuracy of the EVD placement was classified as optimal placement, sub-optimal placement and misplacement according to the position of the catheter tip. The complications reported are catheter-related hemorrhage, intracranial infection and hydrocephalus. There were 105 cases enrolled, with 72 patients in the iUS-guided group having 131 catheters inserted and 33 patients in the group where ultrasound was not used with a total of 59 catheters. 116 (88.55%) were optimally placed, 12 (9.16%) sub-optimal and 3 (2.29%) misplaced in the iUS-guided group, while 25 (42.37%) were in optimally placed, 30 (50.85%) sub-optimal and 4(6.78%) misplaced in the control group. Accuracy of placement was highly significantly improved using ultrasound (P < 0.001). The operation time and the average catheterized time were longer in the iUS-guided group (P < 0.05), but the complication rates were no different between the groups. The mRS at three months was not significantly different between the two groups. Using iUS to place EVD catheters in patients with severe IVH is a safe technique delivering more accurate catheter placement without increasing the complication rate compared with freehand placement.
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Sci Rep
July 2023
Department of Neurosurgery, Taizhou First People's Hospital, Taizhou, Zhejiang, 318020, People's Republic of China.
Severe IVH often results in a poor outcome. Currently, EVD is a standard treatment for IVH, but there is little research to show whether using ultrasound to guide the catheter placement improves outcome. Patients with severe IVH who had iUS-guided EVD (the iUS-guided group) were enrolled retrospectively and compared with a group who had EVD performed without ultrasound guidance (the control group) from January 2016 to July 2022.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Oncol
October 2022
Department of Neurosurgery, Hospital Clínic de Barcelona, Barcelona, Spain.
Objective: Intraoperative imaging is a chief asset in neurosurgical oncology, it improves the extent of resection and postoperative outcomes. Imaging devices have evolved considerably, in particular ultrasound (iUS) and magnetic resonance (iMR). Although iUS is regarded as a more economically convenient and yet effective asset, no formal comparison between the efficiency of iUS and iMR in neurosurgical oncology has been performed.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Surg Oncol
May 1995
Department of Surgical Oncology, Ankara University Medical School, Turkey.
Determination of the resection margins during surgery for gastric malignancy is a subject of controversy because accurate detection of horizontal limits of tumor spread is difficult by current methods. In this study, we investigated the value of intraoperative-ultrasonography (IUS) in the detection of proximal and distal limits of horizontal tumor spread (HTS) in 19 gastric adenocarcinoma (Group I) and five gastric lymphoma (Group II) patients. After sonographic and clinical limits of HTS were marked, resections were carried out 2 cm away from the IUS limits, and biopsies from IUS limits and resection margins were obtained.
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