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Intraoperative Arachnoid Plasty Has Possibility to Prevent Chronic Subdural Hematoma after Surgery for Unruptured Cerebral Aneurysms.

  • Kenji Yagi‎ et al.
  • Neurologia medico-chirurgica‎
  • 2015‎

Some patients develop chronic subdural hematomas (CSDHs) after the clipping/coating of unruptured aneurysms. The risk factors are not well understood and while no preventive methods are currently available, arachnoid plasty (ARP) may intercept the development of postoperative CSDH. We investigated the risk factors for CSDH and the usefulness of ARP to prevent postoperative CSDH. Between January 2009 and June 2013, 393 patients underwent 416 aneurysm surgeries via the pterional approach at Kushiro Kojinkai Memorial Hospital. Of these, 394 aneurysms (371 patients) were included in this study. Using multivariate analysis we evaluated the relationship between the patient demographics and clinical characteristics, and the development of postoperative symptomatic CSDH. We also studied the effect of ARP performed during aneurysm surgery. We found that symptomatic CSDH developed after 20 (5.1%) of the 394 operations; it was addressed by burr hole surgery and evacuation/irrigation. Male gender, advanced age, and oral anticoagulant therapy were significant risk factors for CSDH. Additive ARP, performed in the course of 132 surgeries (33.5%) was found to be a significant negative risk factor. The incidence of CSDH was significantly lower in patients who had undergone ARP than in patients who had not undergone it (0.8% vs. 7.3%, p < 0.01). We first report that ARP is useful for the prevention of CSDH in patients treated by aneurysm surgery.


Histopathological Investigation of Meningioma Capsule with Respect to Tumor Cell Invasion.

  • Takashi Sugawara‎ et al.
  • Neurologia medico-chirurgica‎
  • 2022‎

No previous study has histopathologically investigated whether a meningioma capsule presents with tumor cells. We investigated which types of tumor capsules (TCs) included tumor cells to help intraoperatively determine those TCs that do not need to be removed and have a low recurrence risk. We investigated 22 specimens of 14 newly diagnosed meningiomas from February 2011 to June 2021. The capsules were classified into three types: TC, capsule-like thickened arachnoid membrane (CAM), and extended membrane (EM). Capsule properties were scored by hardness (soft = 1, medium = 2, hard = 3) and transparency (high = 1, medium = 2, low = 3). The hardness, transparency, and score sums were compared between capsules with and without tumor invasion in the CAM and EM types. The mean follow-up duration was 40.6 months, and there was only one recurrence in a remote location from the residual capsule. Nine capsules were classified as TC, seven as CAM, and six as EM. The tumor cells invaded 88.9% of TCs, 42.9% of CAMs, and 50% of EMs. The hardness, transparency, and score sums for CAMs with tumor invasion were lower than those for CAMs without tumor invasion, although not significant (P = 0.114, P = 0.114, P = 0.057, respectively). A thickened TC or soft and highly transparent CAM indicated a high risk for tumor cell invasion; thus, such cases require a careful and long-term follow-up. Hard and low transparent residual CAMs may have had a low risk for tumor invasion; therefore, leaving such capsules that tightly adhere to the eloquent cortex can be theoretically justified to avoid damaging the brain surface.


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