50 research outputs found

    Initial Management of Head Trauma

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    Traumatic carotid artery dissection: diagnosis and treatment

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    ✓ Early diagnosis and successful management of traumatic carotid artery dissections require a high index of clinical suspicion. The diagnostic study of choice is cerebral arteriography. In this paper, 24 cases of traumatic carotid artery dissection are described. Presenting signs and symptoms include Horner's syndrome, dysphasia, hemiparesis, obtundation, and monoparesis. Patients detected early with mild neurological deficits fared well with treatment, while those with profound neurological deficits and delayed diagnoses had poor outcomes. Aggressive nonsurgical treatment is advocated including anticoagulation therapy for prevention of progressive thrombosis and arterial occlusion and/or distal arterial embolization with resultant cerebral ischemia. Direct surgical thromboendarterectomy is considered to carry high morbidity and mortality rates.</jats:p

    Anatomic Evaluation of Cisternal Puncture

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    Abstract Cisternal puncture, although less frequently used since the advent of computed tomography and magnetic resonance imaging, is an important tool in the neurodiagnostic armamentarium. An anatomic study of cisternal puncture was conducted on fresh cadavers by direct visualization and fluoroscopic guidance of cisternal puncture. Anatomic and radiographic analyses demonstrated a dramatic dynamic anatomy of the cisternal space during cisternal puncture and indicated that “tenting” of the dura mater over the needle occurs reliably during cisternal puncture. Lateral fluoroscopy may decrease the risk of cisternal puncture by allowing visualization of needle depth in the cisternal space.</jats:p

    Treatment Options for Paraclinoid Aneurysms: Discussion

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    Analysis of 76 civilian craniocerebral gunshot wounds

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    ✓ A retrospective analysis of 76 civilian craniocerebral gunshot wounds treated over a 20-month period is presented. The authors report a 62% mortality rate and conclude that the admission Glasgow Coma Scale (GCS) score is a valuable prognosticator of outcome. Other important findings were: 1) patients with a GCS score of 3 invariably died, with or without surgical intervention; and 2) the presence of intracranial hematomas, ventricular injury, or bihemispheric wounding was associated with a poor outcome. Standardized methods of data reporting should be adopted in order to allow multicenter trials or comparisons that might lead to management practices that could improve results.</jats:p

    Lateral Atlantooccipital Dislocation: Case Report

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    Abstract A case of lateral atlantooccipital dislocation is presented, and its successful management is outlined, demonstrating the importance of the physical examination and the utilization of computed tomography. Open reduction and stabilization with direct visualization of the spinal axis is the preferred method of treatment.</jats:p

    The history of neurosurgery in Memphis: the Semmes-Murphey Clinic and the Department of Neurosurgery at the University of Tennessee College of Medicine

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    Neurological surgery was defined as a separate surgical specialty by Harvey Cushing and a few other surgeons, most of whom were trained and influenced by Cushing. One of these, Raphael Eustace Semmes, became the first neurosurgeon in Memphis, Tennessee, in 1912. After World War II, Semmes and his first associate, Francis Murphey, incorporated the Semmes-Murphey Clinic, which has been primarily responsible for the growth of the Department of Neurosurgery at the University of Tennessee Health Science Center in Memphis, as well as the development of select neurosurgical subspecialties in Memphis area hospitals.</jats:p
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