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Full-Text Articles in Medicine and Health Sciences
Timing Of Postoperative Magnetic Resonance Imaging (Mri) Following Glioma Resection: Shattering The 72 Hour Window, Syed Sarmad Bukhari, Muhammad Shahzad Shamim, Fatima Mubarak
Timing Of Postoperative Magnetic Resonance Imaging (Mri) Following Glioma Resection: Shattering The 72 Hour Window, Syed Sarmad Bukhari, Muhammad Shahzad Shamim, Fatima Mubarak
Section of Neurosurgery
Extent of enhancing tumour resection is correlated with progression free survival following glioma surgery. Historically, a contrast enhanced MRI has been recommended within 72 hours following surgery to evaluate for residual disease. This theoretical window was established amidst conflicting evidence to avoid reactive enhancement. Recent studies with better designs and better imaging quality have sought to challenge this window with a more pragmatic method of evaluating residual disease.
Delayed Spinal Cord Infarction Following Anterior Cervical Surgical Decompression, Muhammad Faheem Khan, Rashid Jooma, Fauzan Alam Hashmi, Muhammad Faraz Raghib
Delayed Spinal Cord Infarction Following Anterior Cervical Surgical Decompression, Muhammad Faheem Khan, Rashid Jooma, Fauzan Alam Hashmi, Muhammad Faraz Raghib
Section of Neurosurgery
Anterior cervical discectomy and fusion (ACDF) for cord compression is a safe and effective procedure with good outcomes. However, worsening of myelopathy is the most feared adverse event of the surgery. We report the case of a 36-year-old male patient who presented with an acute non-traumatic C5-6 cervical disc herniation causing incomplete quadriparesis. He underwent an uncomplicated ACDF at C5-6, and after an initial period of improvement, he developed a delayed onset of an anterior cord syndrome on day 3, without any discerning cause. We have reviewed similar cases reported in the literature and believe that our patient's postsurgical course …
Gas-Producing Brain Abscess, Arshad A. Siddiqui, Khalid N. Chishti
Gas-Producing Brain Abscess, Arshad A. Siddiqui, Khalid N. Chishti
Section of Neurosurgery
A case of a known psychiatric patient who presented with rapid neurological deterioration is reported. Neuroimaging revealed a gas-producing brain abscess in left parietal lobe with a contiguous focus of infection in the adjacent bone and scalp initiated by obsessive scalp scratching. On complete surgical excision of abscess, followed by culture-based antibiotic therapy, a good neurological recovery was achieved with minimal residual deficits at follow-up.