Greenberg’s Handbook of Neurosurgery

Greenberg’s Handbook of Neurosurgery

630 Lei (TVA inclus)
Livrare gratis la comenzi peste 500 RON. Pentru celelalte comenzi livrarea este 20 RON.

Cod produs/ISBN: 9781684205042

Disponibilitate: La comanda in aproximativ 4 saptamani

Editura: Thieme

Limba: Engleza

Nr. pagini: 1990

Coperta: Paperback

Dimensiuni: 13.2 x 5.8 x 20.3 cm

An aparitie: 19/04/2023

 

Description:

The fundamental, one-stop global resource for neurosurgical practice in updated 10th edition

Unlike traditional medical textbooks, the origins of the now legendary Handbook of Neurosurgery by Mark Greenberg took root in the late 1980's in the notes the author kept while taking care of his patients, from his weekly grand rounds presentations, and in the literature he read. Now in its 10th edition, the book that is often referred to as the "bible for neurosurgeons" has grown organically over the years to include more topics of importance to those who provide healthcare to patients with neurologic ailments, and to reflect advances in the understanding and management of the underlying conditions and diseases.

Throughout 23 sections and 116 chapters, the generously illustrated text covers information ranging from pediatrics to geriatrics. The comprehensive, conveniently compact book provides detailed, high-value, and actionable information that can be quickly accessed to enhance patient management, thereby eliminating the need to wade through superfluous material. It is also a perfect study companion for board examination and preparation for the maintenance of certification.

Key Features:

Updated classification and diagnostic criteria of central and peripheral nervous system tumors, based on the most recent WHO classifications

Reworking of numerous sections (including current concepts in pseudotumor cerebri, seizure classification…)

Addition of new chapters (including idiopathic scoliosis, LOVA and tuberculosis of the CNS)

Current principles of nonsurgical and surgical management, including risk factors, indications, diagnostics, prognoses, contraindications, and differential diagnoses

Nearly 500 figures, including new summary flow charts, illustrations, and simplified diagrams for early learners, enhance understanding of material discussed in the text

And, as always, thousands of references!

This unique book encompasses a wide breadth of neurosurgical topics in an easy digestible format, making it an indispensable daily reference for all neurosurgical residents, fellows, neurosurgeons, and allied health practitioners.

 

Table of Contents:

 

Section I Anatomy and Physiology

1 Gross Anatomy, Cranial and Spine

1.1 Cortical surface anatomy

1.1.1 Lateral cortical surface

1.1.2 Brodmann’s areas

1.1.3 Medial surface

1.1.4 Somatotopic organization of primary sensory and motor cortex

1.2 Central sulcus on axial imaging

1.3 Surface anatomy of the cranium

1.3.1 Craniometric points

1.3.2 Relation of skull markings to cerebral anatomy

1.3.3 Relationship of ventricles to skull

1.4 Surface landmarks of spine levels

1.5 Cranial foramina and their contents

1.5.1 Summary

1.5.2 Porus acusticus

1.6 Internal capsule

1.6.1 Architectural anatomy

1.6.2 Vascular supply of the internal capsule (IC)

1.7 Cerebellopontine angle anatomy

1.8 Occipitoatlantoaxial-complex anatomy

1.9 Spinal cord anatomy

1.9.1 Dentate ligament

1.9.2 Spinal cord tracts

1.9.3 Dermatomes and sensory nerves

1.10 References

2 Vascular Anatomy

2.1 Cerebral vascular territories

2.2 Cerebral arterial anatomy

2.2.1 General information

2.2.2 Circle of Willis

2.2.3 Anatomical segments of intracranial cerebral arteries

2.2.4 Anterior circulation

2.2.5 Posterior circulation

2.2.6 Fetal carotid-vertebrobasilar anastomoses

2.3 Cerebral venous anatomy

2.3.1 Supratentorial venous system

2.3.2 Posterior fossa venous anatomy

2.4 Spinal cord vasculature

2.5 References

3 Neurophysiology and Regional Brain Syndromes

3.1 Neurophysiology

3.1.1 Blood-brain barrier

3.1.2 Language and speech function

3.1.3 Babinski sign and Hoffmann sign

3.1.4 Bladder neurophysiology

3.2 Regional brain syndromes

3.2.1 Overview

3.2.2 Parietal lobe syndromes

3.2.3 Foster Kennedy syndrome

3.2.4 Cerebellar mutism & syndromes of the posterior fossa

3.2.5 Brainstem and related syndromes

3.2.6 Parinaud’s syndrome

3.3 Jugular foramen syndromes

3.3.1 Applied anatomy

3.3.2 Clinical syndromes

3.4 References

Section II General and Neurology

4 Neuroanesthesia

4.1 ASA classification

4.2 Neuroanesthesia parameters

4.3 Drugs used in neuroanesthesia

4.3.1 Inhalational agents

4.3.2 Intravenous anesthetic agents

4.3.3 Miscellaneous drugs in neuroanesthesia

4.3.4 Paralytics for intubation

4.4 Anesthetic requirements for intraoperative evoked potential monitoring

4.5 Malignant hyperthermia

4.5.1 General information

4.5.2 Presentation

4.5.3 Treatment

4.5.4 Prevention

4.6 References

5 Sodium Homeostasis and Osmolality

5.1 Serum osmolality and sodium concentration

5.2 Hyponatremia

5.2.1 General information

5.2.2 Evaluation of hyponatremia

5.2.3 Symptoms

5.2.4 Syndrome of inappropriate antidiuresis (SIAD)

5.2.5 Syndrome of inappropriate antidiuretic hormone secretion (SIADH)

5.2.6 Cerebral salt wasting

5.3 Hypernatremia

5.3.1 General information

5.3.2 Diabetes insipidus

5.4 References

6 General Neurocritical Care

6.1 Parenteral agents for hypertension

6.2 Hypotension (shock)

6.2.1 Classification

6.2.2 Cardiovascular agents for shock

6.3 Acid inhibitors

6.3.1 Stress ulcers in neurosurgery

6.3.2 Prophylaxis for stress ulcers

6.3.3 Possible increased pneumonia and mortality from altering gastric pH

6.3.4 Histamine2 (H2) antagonists

6.3.5 Gastric acid secretion inhibitors (proton pump inhibitors)

6.3.6 Miscellaneous

6.4 Rhabdomyolysis

6.4.1 Background and pathophysiology

6.4.2 Etiology and epidemiology

6.4.3 Management and treatment

6.5 References

7 Sedatives, Paralytics, Analgesics

7.1 Sedatives and paralytics

7.1.1 Richmond agitation-sedation scale (RASS)

7.1.2 Conscious sedation

7.1.3 Sedation

7.2 Paralytics (neuromuscular blocking agents)

7.2.1 General information

7.2.2 Ultra-short acting paralytics

7.2.3 Short acting paralytics

7.2.4 Intermediate acting paralytics

7.2.5 Reversal of competitive muscle blockade

7.3 Analgesics

7.3.1 General information

7.3.2 Guiding principles

7.3.3 Analgesics for some specific types of pain

7.3.4 Nonopioid analgesics

7.3.5 Opioid analgesics

7.3.6 Adjuvant pain medications

7.4 References

8 Endocrinology

8.1 Pituitary embryology and neuroendocrinology

8.1.1 Embryology and derivation of the pituitary gland

8.1.2 Pituitary hormones, their targets and their controls

8.2 Corticosteroids

8.2.1 General information

8.2.2 Replacement therapy

8.2.3 Hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis suppression

8.2.4 Steroid side effects

8.2.5 Hypocortisolism

8.3 Hypothyroidism

8.3.1 General information

8.3.2 Thyroid replacement

8.3.3 Routine thyroid replacement dosing

8.4 References

9 Hematology

9.1 Circulating blood volume

9.2 Blood component therapy

9.2.1 Massive transfusions

9.2.2 Cellular component

9.2.3 Platelets

9.2.4 Plasma proteins

9.3 Anticoagulation considerations in neurosurgery

9.3.1 General information

9.3.2 Contraindications to heparin

9.3.3 Patients with unruptured (incidental) cerebral aneurysms

9.3.4 Patients on anticoagulation/antiplatelet drugs who develop SAH

9.3.5 In patients with brain tumor

9.3.6 Postoperatively following craniotomy

9.3.7 Management of anticoagulants prior to neurosurgical procedures

9.3.8 Anticoagulants

9.3.9 Coagulopathies

9.3.10 Thromboembolism in neurosurgery

9.4 Extramedullary hematopoiesis

9.4.1 General information

9.4.2 Epidural cord compression from EMH

9.4.3 Treatment

9.5 References

10 Neurology for Neurosurgeons

10.1 Dementia

10.2 Headache

10.2.1 General information

10.2.2 Migraine

10.3 Parkinsonism

10.3.1 General information

10.3.2 Idiopathic paralysis agitans (IPA)

10.3.3 Secondary parkinsonism

10.4 Multiple sclerosis

10.4.1 General information

10.4.2 Epidemiology

10.4.3 Classification

10.4.4 Clinical signs and symptoms

10.4.5 Differential diagnosis

10.4.6 Diagnostic criteria

10.5 Acute disseminated encephalomyelitis

10.6 Motor neuron diseases

10.6.1 General information

10.6.2 Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis

10.7 Guillain-Barré syndrome

10.7.1 General

10.7.2 Diagnostic criteria

10.7.3 Guillain-Barré variants

10.7.4 Differential diagnosis

10.7.5 Imaging

10.7.6 Treatment

10.7.7 Outcome

10.8 Myelitis

10.8.1 General information

10.8.2 Etiology

10.8.3 Clinical

10.8.4 Evaluation

10.8.5 Treatment

10.8.6 Prognosis

10.9 Neurosarcoidosis

10.9.1 General information

10.9.2 Pathology

10.9.3 Epidemiology

10.9.4 Clinical findings

10.9.5 Laboratory

10.9.6 Imaging

10.9.7 Differential diagnosis

10.9.8 Diagnosis

10.9.9 Biopsy

10.9.10 Treatment

10.9.11 Prognosis

10.10 References

11 Neurovascular Disorders and Neurotoxicology

11.1 Posterior reversible encephalopathy syndrome (PRES)

11.1.1 General information

11.1.2 Associated findings and conditions

11.1.3 Treatment

11.2 Crossed cerebellar diaschisis

11.3 Vasculitis and vasculopathy

11.3.1 General information

11.3.2 Giant cell arteritis (GCA)

11.3.3 Polymyalgia rheumatica (PMR)

11.3.4 ANCA-associated vasculitis

11.3.5 Other vasculitides

11.3.6 Lymphomatoid granulomatosis

11.3.7 Behçet’s syndrome

11.3.8 Isolated CNS vasculitis

11.3.9 Hypersensitivity vasculitis

11.3.10 Fibromuscular dysplasia

11.3.11 Miscellaneous vasculopathies

11.3.12 Paraneoplastic syndromes affecting the nervous system

11.4 Neurotoxicology

11.4.1 Ethanol

11.4.2 Opioids

11.4.3 Cocaine

11.4.4 Amphetamines

11.4.5 Carbon monoxide

11.4.6 Heavy metal toxicity

11.5 References

Section III Imaging and Diagnostics

12 Plain Radiology and Contrast Agents

12.1 C-Spine X-rays

12.1.1 Normal findings

12.1.2 Rule of Spence*

12.1.3 (Anterior) atlantodental interval (ADI)

12.1.4 Posterior atlantodental interval (PADI)

12.1.5 Canal diameter

12.1.6 Prevertebral soft tissue

12.1.7 Interspinous distances

12.1.8 Pediatric C-spine

12.2 Lumbosacral (LS) spine X-rays

12.3 Skull X-rays

12.3.1 Sella turcica

12.3.2 Basilar invagination and basilar impression (BI)

12.4 Contrast agents in neuroradiology

12.4.1 Iodinated contrast agents

12.4.2 Reactions to intravascular contrast media

12.5 Radiation safety for neurosurgeons

12.5.1 General information

12.5.2 Units

12.5.3 Typical radiation exposure

12.5.4 Occupational exposure

12.6 References

13 Imaging and Angiography

13.1 CAT scan (AKA CT scan)

13.1.1 General information

13.1.2 Noncontrast vs. IV contrast enhanced CT scan (CECT)

13.1.3 CT angiography (CTA)

13.1.4 CT perfusion (CTP)

13.2 Pregnancy and CT scans

13.3 Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI)

13.3.1 General information

13.3.2  Specific imaging sequences

13.3.3 MRI protocols

13.3.4 Contraindications to MRI

13.3.5 MRI contrast

13.3.6 Magnetic resonance angiography (MRA)

13.3.7 Diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI) and perfusion-imaging (PWI)

13.3.8 Magnetic resonance spectroscopy (MRS)

13.3.9 Diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) MRI and white matter tracts

13.4 Angiography

13.5 Myelography

13.6 Radionuclide scanning

13.6.1 Three phase bone scan

13.6.2 Gallium scan

13.7 References

14 Electrodiagnostics

14.1 Electroencephalogram (EEG)

14.1.1 General information

14.1.2 Common EEG rhythms.

14.1.3 Burst suppression

14.2 Evoked potentials

14.2.1 General information

14.2.2 (Somato) sensory evoked potentials (SSEP or SEP)

14.2.3 Intraoperative evoked potentials

14.2.4 Intraoperative electrophysiologic monitoring changes

14.3 NCS/EMG

14.3.1 General information

14.3.2 Electromyography (EMG)

14.4 References

Section IV Developmental Anomalies

15 Primary Intracranial Anomalies

15.1 Arachnoid cysts, intracranial

15.1.1 General information

15.1.2 Epidemiology of intracranial arachnoid cysts

15.1.3 Distribution

15.1.4 Presentation

15.1.5 Evaluation

15.1.6 Treatment

15.1.7 Outcome

15.2 Craniofacial development

15.2.1 Normal development

15.2.2 Craniosynostosis

15.2.3 Encephalocele

15.3 Dandy Walker malformation

15.3.1 General information

15.3.2 Differential diagnosis

15.3.3 Pathophysiology

15.3.4 Risk factors and epidemiology

15.3.5 Treatment

15.3.6 Prognosis

15.4 Aqueductal stenosis

15.4.1 General information

15.4.2 Etiologies

15.4.3 Aqueductal stenosis in infancy

15.4.4 Aqueductal stenosis in adulthood

15.5 Agenesis of the corpus callosum

15.5.1 General information

15.5.2 Incidence

15.5.3 Associated neuropathologic findings

15.5.4 Possible presentation

15.6 Absence of the septum pellucidum

15.7 Intracranial lipomas

15.7.1 General information

15.7.2 Epidemiology of intracranial lipomas

15.7.3 Evaluation

15.7.4 Presentation

15.7.5 Treatment

15.8 Hypothalamic hamartomas

15.8.1 General information

15.8.2 Clinical findings

15.8.3 Imaging

15.8.4 Pathology

15.8.5 Treatment

15.9 References

16 Primary Spinal Developmental Anomalies

16.1 Spinal arachnoid cysts

16.1.1 General information

16.1.2 Treatment

16.2 Spinal dysraphism (spina bifida)

16.2.1 Definitions

16.2.2 Spina bifida occulta (SBO)

16.2.3 Myelomeningocele

16.2.4 Lipomyeloschisis

16.2.5 Dermal sinus

16.3 Failure of vertebral segmentation and formation

16.3.1 General information

16.3.2 Hemivertebra

16.4 Klippel-Feil syndrome

16.4.1 General information

16.4.2 Presentation

16.4.3 Treatment

16.5 Tethered cord syndrome

16.5.1 General information

16.5.2 Presentation

16.5.3 Myelomeningocele patients

16.5.4 Scoliosis in tethered cord

16.5.5 Tethered cord in adults

16.5.6 Pre-op evaluation

16.6 Split cord malformation

16.6.1 General information

16.6.2 Type I SCM

16.6.3 Type II SCM

16.7 Lumbosacral nerve root anomalies

16.8 References

17 Primary Craniospinal Anomalies

17.1 Chiari malformations

17.1.1 General information

17.1.2 Type 1 Chiari malformation

17.1.3 Type 2 (Arnold)–Chiari malformation

17.1.4 Other Chiari malformations

17.1.5 Surgical technique for suboccipital decompression

17.1.6 Closure

17.1.7 Managing ventral compression

17.2 Neural tube defects

17.2.1 Classification

17.2.2 Examples of neural tube defects

17.2.3 Risk factors

17.2.4 Prenatal detection of neural tube defects

17.3 Neurenteric cysts

17.3.1 General information

17.3.2 Intracranial neurenteric cysts

17.4 References

Section V Coma and Brain Death

18 Coma

18.1 Coma and coma scales

18.2 Posturing

18.2.1 General information

18.2.2 Decorticate posturing

18.2.3 Decerebrate posturing

18.3 Etiologies of coma

18.3.1 Toxic/metabolic causes of coma

18.3.2 Structural causes of coma

18.3.3 Pseudocoma

18.3.4 Approach to the comatose patient

18.4 Herniation syndromes

18.4.1 General information

18.4.2 Coma from supratentorial mass

18.4.3 Coma from infratentorial mass

18.4.4 Central herniation

18.4.5 Uncal herniation

18.5 Hypoxic coma

18.6 References

19 Brain Death and Organ Donation

19.1 Brain death in adults

19.2 Brain death criteria

19.2.1 General information

19.2.2 Establishing the cause of cessation of brain activity

19.2.3 Clinical criteria

19.2.4 State and local laws

19.2.5 Ancillary confirmatory tests

19.2.6 Pitfalls in brain death determination

19.3 Brain death in children

19.3.1 General information

19.3.2 Clinical examination

19.3.3 Ancillary studies

19.4 Organ and tissue donation

19.4.1 General considerations

19.4.2 Referral of the potential organ donor

19.4.3 Medical management of the potential organ donor

19.4.4 Organ Procurement Organization (OPO) process

19.4.5 Organ donation after cardiac death

19.5 References

Section VI Infection

20 Bacterial Infections of the Parenchyma and Meninges and Complex Infections

20.1 Meningitis

20.1.1 Community acquired meningitis

20.1.2 Post-neurosurgical procedure meningitis

20.1.3 Post craniospinal trauma meningitis (posttraumatic meningitis)

20.1.4 Recurrent meningitis

20.1.5 Chronic meningitis

20.1.6 Chemical meningitis

20.1.7 Antibiotics for specific organisms in meningitis

20.2 Cerebral abscess

20.2.1 General information

20.2.2 Epidemiology

20.2.3 Risk factors

20.2.4 Vectors

20.2.5 Pathogens

20.2.6 Presentation

20.2.7 Stages of cerebral abscess

20.2.8 Evaluation

20.2.9 Treatment

20.2.10 Outcome

20.3 Subdural empyema

20.3.1 General information

20.3.2 Epidemiology

20.3.3 Etiologies

20.3.4 Organisms

20.3.5 Presentation

20.3.6 Evaluation

20.3.7 Treatment

20.3.8 Outcome

20.4 Neurologic involvement in HIV/AIDS

20.4.1 Types of neurologic involvement

20.4.2 Neuroradiologic findings in AIDS

20.4.3 Management of intracerebral lesions

20.4.4 Prognosis

20.5 Tuberculosis of the CNS (neurotuberculosis)

20.5.1 General information

20.5.2 Epidemiology & risk factors

20.5.3 Pathogenesis

20.5.4 Medical treatment for TB

20.5.5 Intracranial tuberculoma

20.5.6 Tuberculous meningitis (TBM)

20.5.7 Other forms of TB involvement

20.6 Lyme disease—neurologic manifestations

20.6.1 General information

20.6.2 Clinical findings

20.6.3 Diagnosis

20.6.4 Treatment

20.7 Nocardia brain abscess

20.7.1 General information

20.7.2 Diagnosis

20.7.3 Treatment

20.8 References

21 Skull, Spine, and Post-Surgical Infections

21.1 Shunt infection

21.1.1 Epidemiology

21.1.2 Morbidity of shunt infections in children

21.1.3 Risk factors for shunt infection

21.1.4 Pathogens

21.1.5 Presentation

21.1.6 Treatment

21.2 External ventricular drain (EVD)-related infection

21.2.1 General information

21.2.2 Definitions

21.2.3 Epidemiology

21.2.4 Microbiology

21.2.5 Clinical presentation

21.2.6 Diagnosis

21.2.7 Principles of management

21.2.8 Prevention

21.3 Wound infections

21.3.1 Laminectomy wound infection

21.3.2 Craniotomy wound infection

21.4 Osteomyelitis of the skull

21.4.1 General information

21.4.2 Pathogens

21.4.3 Imaging

21.4.4 Treatment

21.5 Spine infections

21.5.1 General information

21.5.2 Spinal epidural abscess

21.5.3 Spinal subdural empyema (AKA spinal subdural abscess)

21.5.4 Vertebral osteomyelitis

21.5.5 Discitis

21.5.6 Psoas abscess

21.6 References

22 Other Nonbacterial Infections

22.1 Viral encephalitis

22.1.1 Herpes simplex encephalitis

22.1.2 Multifocal varicella-zoster leukoencephalitis

22.2 Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease

22.2.1 General information

22.2.2 Epidemiology

22.2.3 Acquired prion diseases

22.2.4 Inherited CJD

22.2.5 Sporadic CJD (sCJD)

22.2.6 New variant CJD

22.2.7 Iatrogenic transmission of CJD

22.2.8 Pathology

22.2.9 Presentation

22.2.10 Diagnosis

22.2.11 Treatment and prognosis

22.3 Parasitic infections of the CNS

22.3.1 General information

22.3.2 Neurocysticercosis

22.3.3 Echinococcosis

22.4 Fungal infections of the CNS

22.4.1 General information

22.4.2 Cryptococcal involvement of the CNS

22.5 Amebic infections of the CNS

22.5.1 General information

22.5.2 Treatment

22.6 References

Section VII Hydrocephalus and Cerebrospinal Fluid (CSF)

23 Cerebrospinal Fluid

23.1 General CSF characteristics

23.2 Bulk flow model

23.2.1 General information

23.2.2 Production

23.2.3 Absorption

23.3 CSF constituents

23.3.1 Cellular components of CSF

23.3.2 Noncellular components of CSF

23.3.3 Variation with site

23.3.4 CSF variations with age

23.4 Cranial CSF fistula

23.4.1 General information

23.4.2 Possible routes of egress of CSF

23.4.3 Traumatic vs. nontraumatic etiology

23.5 Spinal CSF fistula

23.6 Meningitis in CSF fistula

23.7 Evaluation of the patient with CSF fistula

23.7.1 Determining if rhinorrhea or otorrhea is due to a CSF fistula

23.7.2 Localizing the site of CSF fistula

23.8 Treatment for CSF fistula

23.8.1 Initial treatment

23.8.2 For persistent posttraumatic or post-op leaks

23.9 Spontaneous intracranial hypotension (SIH)

23.9.1 General information

23.9.2 Epidemiology of spontaneous intracranial hypotension (SIH)

23.9.3 Clinical

23.9.4 Diagnosis

23.9.5 Pathophysiology

23.9.6 Evaluation

23.9.7 Treatment

23.9.8 Outcome

23.10 References

24 Hydrocephalus – General Aspects

24.1 Basic definition

24.2 Epidemiology

24.3 Etiologies of hydrocephalus

24.3.1 General information

24.3.2 Specific etiologies of hydrocephalus

24.3.3 Special forms of hydrocephalus

24.4 Signs and symptoms of HCP

24.4.1 In older children (with rigid cranial vault) and adults

24.4.2 In young children

24.4.3 Blindness from hydrocephalus

24.5 Imaging diagnosis of hydrocephalus

24.5.1 General information

24.5.2 Specific imaging criteria for hydrocephalus

24.5.3 Other findings suggestive of hydrocephalus

24.5.4 Chronic hydrocephalus

24.6 Differential diagnosis of hydrocephalus

24.7 External hydrocephalus (AKA benign external hydrocephalus)

24.7.1 General information

24.7.2 Differential diagnosis

24.7.3 Treatment

24.8 X-linked hydrocephalus

24.8.1 General information

24.8.2 Pathophysiology

24.8.3 L1 syndromes

24.9 “Arrested hydrocephalus” in pediatrics

24.9.1 General information

24.9.2 Shunt independence

24.9.3 When to remove a disconnected or non-functioning shunt?

24.10 Entrapped fourth ventricle

24.10.1 General information

24.10.2 Presentation

24.10.3 Treatment

24.11 Ventriculomegaly in adults

24.11.1 General information

24.11.2 Long-standing overt ventriculomegaly in an adult (LOVA)

24.12 Normal pressure hydrocephalus (NPH)

24.12.1 General information

24.12.2 Epidemiology

24.12.3 Clinical

24.12.4 Other conditions that may be present

24.12.5 Imaging in iNPH

24.12.6 Ancillary tests for NPH

24.12.7 Diagnostic criteria

24.12.8 Treatment

24.12.9 Outcome

24.13 Hydrocephalus and pregnancy

24.13.1 General information

24.13.2 Preconception management of patients with shunts

24.13.3 Gravid management

24.13.4 Intrapartum management

24.14 References

25 Treatment of Hydrocephalus

25.1 Medical treatment of hydrocephalus

25.1.1 Diuretic therapy

25.2 Spinal taps

25.3 Surgical

25.3.1 Goals of therapy

25.3.2 Surgical options

25.4 Endoscopic third ventriculostomy

25.4.1 Indications

25.4.2 Contraindications

25.4.3 Complications

25.4.4 Technique

25.4.5 Success rate

25.5 Shunts

25.5.1 Types of shunts

25.5.2 Disadvantages/complications of various shunts

25.5.3 Shunt valves

25.5.4 Miscellaneous shunt hardware

25.6 Shunt problems

25.6.1 Risks associated with shunt insertion

25.6.2 Problems in patients with established CSF shunt

25.6.3 Evaluation of the patient with a shunt

25.6.4 Undershunting

25.6.5 Shunt infection

25.6.6 “Overshunting”

25.6.7 Problems unrelated to shunting

25.6.8 Subdural hematomas in patients with CSF shunts

25.6.9 Abdominal (peritoneal) pseudocyst with VP shunt

25.6.10 Miscellaneous shunt issues

25.7 Specific shunt systems

25.7.1 Comparison of nonprogrammable shunt valves

25.7.2 Comparison of programmable shunt valves

25.7.3 PS Medical/Medtronic CSF flow controlled valve

25.7.4 Strata® programmable valve

25.7.5 Codman Hakim programmable valve

25.7.6 Certas Plus programmable valve

25.7.7 Polaris programmable valve

25.7.8 ProGAV programmable valve

25.7.9 Heyer-Schulte

25.7.10 Hakim (Cordis) shunt

25.7.11 Integra (Cordis) horizontal-vertical lumbar valve

25.7.12 Holter valve

25.7.13 Salmon-Rickham reservoir

25.8 Surgical insertion techniques

25.9 Instructions to patients

25.10 References

Section VIII Seizures

26 Seizure Classification and Syndromes

26.1 Seizure definitions and classification

26.1.1 Definitions

26.1.2 Miscellaneous seizure information

26.1.3 Classification of seizure types

26.2 Epilepsy syndromes

26.2.1 General information

26.2.2 Mesial temporal lobe epilepsy/ mesial temporal sclerosis

26.2.3 Juvenile myoclonic epilepsy

26.2.4 West syndrome

26.2.5 Lennox-Gastaut syndrome

26.3 References

27 Antiseizure Medication (ASM)

27.1 General information

27.2 Antiseizure medications (ASM) for various seizure types

27.2.1 General information

27.2.2 Indications

27.3 Antiseizure medication pharmacology

27.3.1 General guidelines

27.3.2 Specific antiseizure medications

27.4 Withdrawal of antiseizure medications

27.4.1 General information

27.4.2 Indications for ASM withdrawal

27.4.3 Withdrawal times

27.5 Pregnancy and antiseizure medications

27.5.1 General information

27.5.2 Birth control

27.5.3 Complications during pregnancy

27.5.4 Birth defects

27.6 References

28 Special Seizure Considerations

28.1 New onset seizures

28.1.1 General information

28.1.2 Etiologies

28.1.3 Evaluation

28.2 Posttraumatic seizures

28.2.1 General information

28.2.2 Early PTS (≤ 7 days after head trauma)

28.2.3 Late onset PTS (< 7 days after head trauma)

28.2.4 Penetrating trauma

28.2.5 Treatment

28.3 Alcohol withdrawal seizures

28.3.1 General information

28.3.2 Evaluation

28.3.3 Treatment

28.4 Nonepileptic seizures

28.4.1 General information

28.4.2 Differentiating NES from epileptic seizures

28.5 Febrile seizures

28.5.1 Definitions

28.5.2 Epidemiology

28.5.3 Treatment

28.6 Status epilepticus

28.6.1 General information

28.6.2 Types of status epilepticus

28.6.3 Epidemiology

28.6.4 Etiologies

28.6.5 Morbidity and mortality from SE

28.6.6 Treatment

28.6.7 Medications for non-convulsive status epilepticus

28.6.8 Myoclonic status epilepticus

28.7 References

Section IX Pain

29 Pain

29.1 Major types of pain

29.2 Neuropathic pain syndromes

29.2.1 General information

29.2.2 Medical treatment of neuropathic pain

29.3 Craniofacial pain syndromes

29.3.1 General information

29.3.2 Otalgia

29.3.3 Supraorbital and supratrochlear neuralgia

29.4 Postherpetic neuralgia

29.4.1 General information

29.4.2 Epidemiology

29.4.3 Etiology

29.4.4 Clinical

29.4.5 Medical treatment

29.5 Complex regional pain syndrome (CRPS)

29.5.1 General information

29.5.2 Pathogenesis

29.5.3 Clinical

29.5.4 Symptoms

29.5.5 Signs

29.5.6 Diagnostic aids

29.5.7 Treatment

29.6 References

Section X Peripheral Nerves

30 Peripheral Nerves

30.1 Peripheral nerves – definitions and grading scales

30.1.1 Peripheral nervous system definition

30.1.2 Grading strength and reflexes

30.1.3 Upper motor neuron vs. lower motor neuron

30.1.4 Fasciculations vs. fibrillations

30.2 Muscle innervation

30.2.1 Muscles, roots, trunks, cords and nerves of the upper extremities

30.2.2 Thumb innervation/movement

30.2.3 Muscles, roots, trunks, cords and nerves of the lower extremities

30.3 Peripheral nerve injury/surgery

30.3.1 Nerve action potentials

30.3.2 Use of NAP with lesion in continuity

30.3.3 Timing of surgical repair

30.3.4 Brachial plexus

30.4 References

31 Entrapment Neuropathies

31.1 Entrapment neuropathy – definitions and associations

31.2 Mechanism of injury

31.3 Occipital nerve entrapment

31.3.1 General information

31.3.2 Differential diagnosis

31.3.3 Possible causes of entrapment

31.3.4 Treatment

31.4 Median nerve entrapment

31.4.1 General information

31.4.2 Anatomy

31.4.3 Injuries to the main trunk of the median nerve

31.4.4 Carpal tunnel syndrome

31.5 Ulnar nerve entrapment

31.5.1 General information

31.5.2 Injury above elbow

31.5.3 Ulnar nerve entrapment at elbow (UNE)

31.5.4 Entrapment in the forearm

31.5.5 Entrapment in the wrist or hand

31.6 Radial nerve injuries

31.6.1 Applied anatomy

31.6.2 Axillary compression

31.6.3 Mid-upper arm compression

31.6.4 Forearm compression

31.7 Injury in the hand

31.8 Axillary nerve injuries

31.9 Suprascapular nerve

31.9.1 General information

31.9.2 Etiologies

31.9.3 Differential diagnosis

31.9.4 Diagnosis

31.9.5 Treatment

31.10 Meralgia paresthetica

31.10.1 General information

31.10.2 Signs and symptoms

31.10.3 Occurrence

31.10.4 Differential diagnosis

31.10.5 Treatment

31.11 Obturator nerve entrapment

31.12 Femoral nerve entrapment

31.13 Common peroneal nerve palsy

31.13.1 General information and applied anatomy

31.13.2 Causes of common peroneal nerve injury

31.13.3 Findings in peroneal nerve palsy

31.13.4 Evaluation

31.13.5 Treatment

31.14 Tarsal tunnel

31.14.1 General information

31.14.2 Exam

31.14.3 Diagnosis

31.14.4 Nonsurgical management

31.14.5 Surgical management

31.15 References

32 Non-Entrapment Peripheral Neuropathies

32.1 General information

32.2 Etiologies of peripheral neuropathy

32.3 Classification

32.4 Clinical

32.4.1 Presentation

32.4.2 Evaluation

32.5 Syndromes of peripheral neuropathy

32.5.1 Length-dependent peripheral neuropathy

32.5.2 Critical illness polyneuropathy (CIP)

32.5.3 Paraneoplastic syndromes affecting the nervous system

32.5.4 Alcohol neuropathy

32.5.5 Brachial plexus neuropathy

32.5.6 Lumbosacral plexus neuropathy

32.5.7 Diabetic neuropathy

32.5.8 Drug-induced neuropathy

32.5.9 Femoral neuropathy

32.5.10 AIDS neuropathy

32.5.11 Neuropathy associated with monoclonal gammopathy

32.5.12 Perioperative neuropathies

32.5.13 Other neuropathies

32.6 Peripheral nerve injuries

32.6.1 General information

32.6.2 Brachial plexus injuries

32.7 Missile injuries of peripheral nerves

32.8 Thoracic outlet syndrome

32.8.1 General information

32.8.2 Differential diagnosis

32.8.3 True neurologic TOS

32.8.4 Scalenus (anticus) syndrome (disputed neurologic TOS)

32.9 References

Section XI Neurophthalmology and Neurotology

33 Neurophthalmology

33.1 Nystagmus

33.1.1 Definition

33.1.2 Localizing lesion for various forms of nystagmus

33.2 Papilledema

33.2.1 General information

33.2.2 Findings on funduscopy (ophthalmoscopy)

33.2.3 Imaging findings in papilledema

33.2.4 Differential diagnosis

33.3 Visual fields

33.3.1 General information

33.3.2 Visual field testing

33.3.3 Visual field deficits

33.4 Pupillary diameter

33.4.1 Pupilodilator (sympathetic)

33.4.2 Pupilloconstrictor (parasympathetic)

33.4.3 Pupillary light reflex

33.4.4 Pupillary exam

33.4.5 Alterations in pupillary diameter

33.4.6 Horner syndrome

33.5 Extraocular muscle (EOM) system

33.5.1 Neuroanatomy

33.5.2 Internuclear ophthalmoplegia

33.5.3 Oculomotor (Cr. N. III) nerve palsy (OMP)

33.5.4 Trochlear nerve (IV) palsy

33.5.5 Abducens (VI) palsy

33.5.6 Multiple extraocular motor nerve involvement

33.5.7 Painful ophthalmoplegia

33.5.8 Painless ophthalmoplegia

33.6 Neurophthalmologic syndromes

33.6.1 Pseudotumor (of the orbit)

33.6.2 Tolosa-Hunt syndrome

33.6.3 Raeder’s paratrigeminal neuralgia

33.6.4 Gradenigo’s syndrome

33.7 Miscellaneous neurophthalmologic signs

33.8 References

34 Neurotology

34.1 Dizziness and vertigo

34.1.1 Differential diagnosis of dizziness

34.1.2 Vestibular neurectomy

34.2 Meniere disease

34.2.1 General information

34.2.2 Epidemiology

34.2.3 Clinical

34.3 Facial nerve palsy

34.3.1 Severity grading

34.3.2 Localizing site of lesion

34.3.3 Etiologies

34.3.4 Bell’s palsy

34.3.5 Herpes zoster oticus facial paralysis

34.3.6 Surgical treatment of facial palsy

34.4 Hearing loss

34.4.1 Conductive hearing loss

34.4.2 Sensorineural hearing loss (SNHL)

34.5 References

Section XII Tumors of the Nervous and Related Systems

35 Tumor Classification and General Information

35.1 WHO classification of tumors of the nervous system

35.2 Pediatric brain tumors

35.2.1 General information

35.2.2 Types of tumors

35.2.3 Infratentorial vs. supratentorial tumor location

35.2.4 Intracranial neoplasms during the first year of life

35.3 Brain tumors—general clinical aspects

35.3.1 Epidemiology

35.3.2 Presenting signs and symptoms

35.3.3 Focal neurologic deficits associated with brain tumors

35.3.4 Headaches with brain tumors

35.3.5 Supratentorial tumors

35.3.6 Infratentorial tumors

35.4 Management of the patient with a brain tumor

35.4.1 Initial evaluation and management

35.4.2 Surgical intervention

35.4.3 Surveillance mode

35.5 Chemotherapy agents for brain tumors

35.5.1 General information

35.5.2 Alkylating agents

35.5.3 Nitrosoureas

35.5.4 Combination chemotherapy

35.5.5 Blood-brain barrier (BBB) and chemotherapy agents

35.5.6 Imaging studies following surgical removal of tumor

35.6 Intraoperative pathology consultations (“frozen section”)

35.6.1 Accuracy of intraoperative pathology consultations

35.6.2 Techniques for intraoperative tissue preparation

35.6.3 Selected frozen section pitfalls or potential critical diagnoses

35.6.4 Tissue preparation for permanent sections

35.7 Select commonly utilized stains in neuropathology

35.7.1 Organism and special stains

35.7.2 Immunohistochemical stains

35.7.3 Molecular alterations in major CNS tumors

35.7.4 Tumor markers used clinically

35.8 References

36 Genetic Tumor Syndromes Involving the CNS

36.1 General information

36.2 Neurofibromatosis

36.2.1 General information

36.2.2 Neurofibromatosis type 1

36.2.3 Neurofibromatosis type 2 (NF2 AKA bilateral acoustic NFT)

36.2.4 Schwannomatosis (SWN)

36.3 Other genetic tumor syndromes involving the CNS

36.3.1 Tuberous sclerosis complex (TSC)

36.3.2 Von Hippel-Lindau disease (VHL)

36.3.3 Li-Fraumeni syndrome (LFS)

36.3.4 Cowden syndrome

36.3.5 Constitutional mismatch repair deficiency syndrome

36.3.6 Familial adenomatous polyposis 1 (FAP1)

36.3.7 Carney complex (AKA Carney syndrome)

36.3.8 Sturge–Weber syndrome

36.3.9 Neurocutaneous melanosis (NCM)

36.4 References

37 Adult Diffuse Gliomas

37.1 Incidence

37.2 Risk factors for diffuse gliomas

37.3 General features of gliomas

37.3.1 Neuroradiology

37.3.2 Spread

37.3.3 Tumor-associated cysts

37.3.4 Molecular biomarker testing for diffuse gliomas

37.4 Adult-type diffuse gliomas

37.4.1 Astrocytoma, IDH-mutant (WHO grade 2, 3 or 4) (AIM grades 2-4)

37.4.2 Oligodendroglioma, IDH mutant and 1p/19q-codeleted (WHO grade 2 or 3) (ODG grade 2 or 3)

37.4.3 Glioblastoma, IDH-wildtype (WHO grade 4) (GBM)

37.4.4 Multiple gliomas

37.5 Treatment for adult-type diffuse gliomas

37.5.1 General information

37.5.2 Surgical intervention for adult-type diffuse gliomas

37.5.3 Treatment of adult diffuse gliomas grade 2 (dLGG)

37.5.4 Treatment of diffuse gliomas, grades 3 & 4

37.5.5 Response to treatment

37.6 References

38 Pediatric-type Diffuse Tumors

38.1 Pediatric-type diffuse low-grade gliomas

38.1.1 Diffuse astrocytoma, MYB- or MYBL1-altered (CNS grade 1)

38.1.2 Angiocentric glioma (WHO grade 1)

38.1.3 Polymorphous low-grade neuroepithelial tumor of the young (PLNTY) (WHO grade 1)

38.1.4 Diffuse low-grade glioma, MAPK pathway-altered (WHO grade 1)

38.2 Pediatric-type diffuse high-grade gliomas

38.2.1 Diffuse midline glioma, H3 K27M-altered (WHO grade 4)

38.2.2 Diffuse hemispheric glioma, H3 G34-mutant (WHO grade 4)

38.2.3 Diffuse pediatric-type high-grade glioma, H3-wildtype and IDH-wildtype (WHO grade 4)

38.2.4 Infant-type hemispheric glioma (WHO grade N/A)

38.3 References

39 Circumscribed Astrocytic Gliomas

39.1 General meaning of “circumscribed”

39.2 Specific tumor types

39.2.1 Pilocytic astrocytomas (PCAs) (WHO grade 1)

39.2.2 High-grade astrocytoma with piloid features (HGAP) (WHO grade N/A)

39.2.3 Pleomorphic xanthoastrocytoma (PXA) (WHO grade 2 or 3)

39.2.4 Subependymal giant cell astrocytoma (SEGA) (WHO grade 1)

39.2.5 Chordoid glioma (WHO grade 2)

39.2.6 Astroblastoma, MN1-altered (WHO grade 1)

39.3 References

40 Glioneuronal and Neuronal Tumors

40.1 Glioneuronal tumors

40.1.1 Ganglioglioma (WHO grade 1)

40.1.2 Gangliocytoma (WHO grade 1)

40.1.3 Desmoplastic infantile ganglioglioma (DIG) & desmoplastic infantile astrocytoma (DIA) (WHO grade 1)

40.1.4 Dysembryoplastic neuroepithelial tumor (DNT) (WHO grade 1)

40.1.5 Diffuse glioneuronal tumor with oligodendroglioma-like features and nuclear clusters (DGONC) (WHO grade N/A)

40.1.6 Papillary glioneuronal tumor (PGNT) (WHO grade 1)

40.1.7 Rosette-forming glioneuronal tumor (RGNT) (WHO grade 1)

40.1.8 Myxoid glioneuronal tumor (WHO grade 1)

40.1.9 Diffuse leptomeningeal glioneuronal tumor (DLGNT) (WHO grade 2 or 3)

40.1.10 Dysplastic cerebellar gangliocytoma (DCG) (Lhermitte-Duclos disease) (WHO grade 1)

40.2 Neuronal tumors

40.2.1 Multinodular and vacuolating neuronal tumor (MVNT) (WHO grade 1)

40.2.2 Central neurocytoma (WHO grade 2)

40.2.3 Extraventricular neurocytoma (WHO grade 2)

40.2.4 Cerebellar liponeurocytoma (WHO grade 2)

40.3 References

41 Ependymal Tumors

41.1 Introduction to ependymal tumors

41.2 Specific tumor types

41.2.1 Supratentorial ependymoma (WHO grade 2 or 3)

41.2.2 Supratentorial ependymoma, ZFTA fusion-positive (WHO grade 2 or 3)

41.2.3 Supratentorial ependymoma, YAP1 fusion-positive (WHO grade N/A)

41.2.4 Posterior fossa ependymoma (WHO grade 2 or 3)

41.2.5 Posterior fossa group A (PFA) ependymoma (WHO grade 2 or 3)

41.2.6 Posterior fossa group B (PFB) ependymoma (WHO grade 2 or 3)

41.2.7 Spinal ependymoma (WHO grade 2 or 3)

41.2.8 Spinal ependymoma, MYCN-amplified (WHO grade N/A)

41.2.9 Myxopapillary ependymoma (WHO grade 2)

41.2.10 Subependymoma (WHO grade 1)

41.3 References

42 Choroid Plexus Tumors

42.1 General information

42.2 Choroid plexus tumor types

42.2.1 Choroid plexus papilloma (CPP) (WHO grade 1)

42.2.2 Atypical choroid plexus papilloma (atypical CPP) (WHO grade 2)

42.2.3 Choroid plexus carcinoma (CPC) (WHO grade 3)

42.3 References

43 Embryonal Tumors

43.1 General information for embryonal tumors

43.2 Medulloblastoma (a subset of embryonal tumors), general aspects

43.2.1 General information

43.2.2 Seeding and metastases

43.2.3 Clinical

43.2.4 Classification

43.2.5 Evaluation

43.2.6 Treatment

43.2.7 Prognosis

43.3 Medulloblastomas by definition criteria

43.3.1 Medulloblastoma, histologically defined

43.3.2 Medulloblastomas, molecularly defined

43.4 CNS embryonal tumors other than medulloblastoma

43.4.1 Atypical teratoid/rhabdoid tumor (AT/RT) (WHO grade 4)

43.4.2 Cribriform neuroepithelial tumor (CRINET) (provisional)

43.4.3 Embryonal tumor with multilayered rosettes (ETMR) (WHO grade 4)

43.5 References

44 Pineal Tumors and Pineal Region Lesions

44.1 Pineal region lesions

44.1.1 General information

44.1.2 Clinical

44.1.3 Imaging of pineal region masses

44.1.4 Management of pineal region masses

44.1.5 Surgical treatment of the tumor

44.1.6 Surgical outcome

44.2 Pineal tumors

44.2.1 Pineocytoma (WHO grade 1)

44.2.2 Pineal parenchymal tumor of intermediate differentiation (PPTID) (WHO grade 2 or 3)

44.2.3 Pineoblastoma (WHO grade 4)

44.2.4 Papillary tumor of the pineal region (PTPR) (WHO grade 1 or 2)

44.3 References

45 Cranial and Paraspinal Nerve Tumors

45.1 General information

45.2 Specific cranial and paraspinal nerve tumors

45.2.1 Schwannoma (WHO grade 1)

45.2.2 Neurofibroma (WHO grade 1)

45.2.3 Perineurioma (WHO grade 1)

45.2.4 Hybrid nerve sheath tumors

45.2.5 Malignant melanotic nerve sheath tumor (MMNST)

45.2.6 Malignant peripheral nerve sheath tumor (MPNST) (no WHO grade)

45.2.7 Cauda equina neuroendocrine tumor (WHO grade 1)

45.3 Vestibular schwannoma

45.3.1 General information

45.3.2 Epidemiology

45.3.3 Pathology

45.3.4 Clinical

45.3.5 Evaluation

45.3.6 Management

45.3.7 Surgical treatment

45.4 References

46 Meningiomas (Intracranial)

46.1 General information

46.2 Meningioma tumor types

46.2.1 Meningioma (WHO grade 1, 2 or 3)

46.3 References

47 Mesenchymal, Non-meningothelial Tumors

47.1 General information

47.2 Fibroblastic and myofibroblastic tumors

47.2.1 Solitary fibrous tumor (WHO grade 1, 2 or 3)

47.3 Vascular tumors

47.3.1 Hemangioma (WHO grade 1)

47.3.2 Hemangioblastoma (WHO grade 1)

47.4 Notochordal tumors

47.4.1 Chordoma

47.5 References

48 Melanocytic Tumors and CNS Germ Cell Tumors

48.1 Melanocytic tumors

48.1.1 General information

48.1.2 Diffuse meningeal melanocytic neoplasms

48.1.3 Circumscribed meningeal melanocytic neoplasms

48.2 Germ cell tumors of the CNS

48.2.1 General information

48.2.2 Mature teratoma

48.2.3 Immature teratoma

48.2.4 Teratoma with somatic-type malignancy

48.2.5 Germinoma

48.2.6 Embryonal carcinoma

48.2.7 Yolk sac tumor

48.2.8 Choriocarcinoma

48.2.9 Mixed germ cell tumor

48.3 References

49 Hematolymphoid Tumors Involving the CNS

49.1 CNS lymphomas

49.1.1 Primary diffuse large B-cell lymphoma of the CNS (CNS-DLBCL)

49.1.2 Immunodeficiency-associated CNS lymphomas (IDA-CNSL)

49.2 Histiocytic tumors

49.2.1 General information

49.2.2 Langerhans cell histiocytosis of the CNS or meninges

49.3 References

50 Tumors of the Sellar Region

50.1 General information

50.2 Sellar region tumors of non pituitary origin

50.2.1 Craniopharyngiomas

50.2.2 Adamantinomatous craniopharyngioma (ACP) (WHO grade 1)

50.2.3 Papillary craniopharyngioma (RCP) (WHO grade 1)

50.2.4 Vascular anatomy

50.2.5 Treatment options

50.2.6 Surgical treatment

50.2.7 Radiation

50.2.8 Outcome

50.2.9 Recurrence

50.3 Tumors of the neurohypophysis & infundibulum

50.3.1 General information

50.3.2 Pituicytoma (WHO grade 1)

50.3.3 Granular cell tumor of the sellar region (WHO grade 1)

50.3.4 Spindle cell oncocytoma (WHO grade 1)

50.4 Tumors of the adenohypophysis

50.4.1 Pituitary neuroendocrine tumor (PitNET)/pituitary adenoma

50.4.2 Invasive pituitary tumors

50.5 References

51 PitNET/Adenomas – Clinical Considerations

51.1 General information

51.2 Diagnostic criteria and classification of PitNET/adenoma

51.3 Epidemiology/pathology

51.4 Differential diagnosis of pituitary tumors

51.5 Clinical presentation of pituitary tumors

51.5.1 General information

51.5.2 Presentation due to hormone oversecretion (secretory tumor)

51.5.3 Presentation due to mass effect

51.5.4 Pituitary apoplexy

51.6 Specific types of pituitary tumors

51.6.1 Nonfunctioning PitNET/adenomas (NFPA)

51.6.2 Gonadotropin (FSH, LH) secreting tumors

51.6.3 Prolactinomas (lactotroph tumor)

51.6.4 Cushing’s disease

51.6.5 Acromegaly

51.6.6 Thyrotropin (TSH)-secreting adenomas (thyrotroph adenoma)

51.6.7 Pathological classification of pituitary tumors

51.7 References

52 Pituitary Tumors – Evaluation

52.1 History and physical

52.2 Diagnostic tests

52.2.1 Overview

52.2.2 Vision evaluation

52.2.3 Initial endocrinologic evaluation (screening)

52.2.4 Specialized endocrinologic tests

52.2.5 Radiographic evaluation

52.3 References

53 PitNET/Adenomas – General Management

53.1 Management/treatment recommendations

53.1.1 General information

53.1.2 Management of large, invasive adenomas

53.1.3 Nonfunctioning PitNET/adenomas—management

53.1.4 Prolactinomas—management

53.1.5 Acromegaly—management

53.1.6 Cushing’s disease—management

53.1.7 Thyrotropin (TSH)-secreting adenomas—management

53.1.8 Gonadotropin secreting adenoma

53.2 Radiation therapy for PitNET/adenomas

53.2.1 General information

53.2.2 Side effects

53.2.3 Recommendation

53.2.4 Sellar radiation therapy for specific PitNET/adenoma types

53.3 References

54 PitNET/Adenomas – Surgical Management, Outcome, and Recurrence Management

54.1 Surgical treatment for PitNET/adenomas

54.1.1 Medical preparation for surgery

54.1.2 Surgical approaches—overview

54.1.3 Transsphenoidal surgery

54.1.4 Perioperative complications

54.1.5 Frontotemporal (pterional) approach

54.1.6 Postoperative management

54.2 Outcome following transsphenoidal surgery

54.2.1 General information

54.2.2 Visual deficit

54.2.3 Biochemical outcome for hormonally active tumors

54.3 Follow-up suggestions for PitNET/adenomas

54.3.1 Nonfunctioning PitNET/adenomas

54.4 Recurrent PitNET/adenomas

54.5 References

Section XIII Other Tumors and Tumor-like Conditions

55 Metastases to the CNS

55.1 Cerebral metastases

55.1.1 General information

55.1.2 Metastases to the brain

55.1.3 Metastases of primary CNS tumors

55.1.4 Location of cerebral mets

55.1.5 Primary cancers in patients with cerebral metastases

55.1.6 Clinical presentation

55.1.7 Evaluation

55.1.8 Management

55.1.9 Outcome

55.1.10 Carcinomatous meningitis

55.2 Spinal epidural metastases

55.2.1 General information

55.2.2 Primary tumors that metastasize to the spine

55.2.3 Presentation

55.2.4 Evaluation and management of epidural spinal metastases

55.3 Hematopoietic tumors

55.3.1 Multiple myeloma

55.3.2 Plasmacytoma

55.4 References

56 Other Tumors, Cysts, and Tumor-Like Lesions

56.1 Other tumors

56.1.1 Olfactory neuroblastoma (ONB)

56.1.2 Epidermoid and dermoid tumors

56.1.3 Paraganglioma (WHO grade 1)

56.2 Cyst like lesions

56.2.1 Colloid cyst

56.2.2 Pineal cysts (PCs)

56.2.3 Rathke’s cleft cyst

56.3 Empty sella syndrome

56.3.1 General information

56.3.2 Primary empty sella syndrome

56.3.3 Secondary empty sella syndrome

56.4 References

57 Pseudotumor Cerebri Syndrome (PTCS)

57.1 General information

57.2 Epidemiology

57.3 Natural history

57.4 Associated conditions

57.4.1 General information

57.4.2 Venous hypertension and sinovenous abnormalities

57.4.3 CSF fistula (leaks)

57.5 Diagnostic criteria

57.6 Clinical findings

57.6.1 Symptoms

57.6.2 Signs

57.6.3 Visual loss in PTCS

57.7 Differential diagnosis

57.8 Evaluation

57.8.1 Overview

57.8.2 Ophthalmologic evaluation

57.8.3 Lumbar puncture

57.8.4 MRI of the brain

57.8.5 MRV (magnetic resonance venography)

57.9 Treatment and management

57.9.1 Treatment goals

57.9.2 Interventional options

57.9.3 Guidelines for management

57.10 References

58 Tumors and Tumor-Like Lesions of the Skull

58.1 Skull tumors

58.1.1 General information

58.1.2 Osteoma

58.1.3 Hemangioma

58.1.4 Epidermoid and dermoid tumors of the skull

58.1.5 Langerhans cell histiocytosis

58.1.6 Squamous cell carcinoma of the scalp involving the skull

58.2 Non-neoplastic skull lesions

58.2.1 General information

58.2.2 Hyperostosis frontalis interna

58.2.3 Fibrous dysplasia

58.3 References

59 Tumors of the Spine and Spinal Cord

59.1 Spine tumors – general information

59.2 Compartmental locations of spinal tumors

59.3 Differential diagnosis: spine and spinal cord tumors

59.3.1 General information

59.3.2 Extradural spinal cord tumors (55%)

59.3.3 Intradural extramedullary spinal cord tumors (40%)

59.3.4 Intramedullary spinal cord tumors (5%)

59.4 Intradural extramedullary spinal cord tumors

59.4.1 Spinal meningiomas

59.4.2 Spinal schwannomas

59.5 Intramedullary spinal cord tumors

59.5.1 Types of intramedullary spinal cord tumors

59.5.2 Differential diagnosis

59.5.3 Specific types of intramedullary spinal cord tumors

59.5.4 Presentation

59.5.5 Diagnosis

59.5.6 Management

59.5.7 Technical surgical considerations

59.5.8 Prognosis

59.6 Primary bone tumors of the spine

59.6.1 General information

59.6.2 Osteoid osteoma and osteoblastoma

59.6.3 Osteosarcoma

59.6.4 Vertebral hemangioma

59.6.5 Giant cell tumors of bone

59.7 References

Section XIV Head Trauma

60 Head Trauma – General Information, Grading, Initial Management

60.1 Head trauma – general information

60.1.1 Introduction

60.1.2 Delayed deterioration

60.2 Grading

60.3 Transfer of trauma patients

60.4 Management in E/R

60.4.1 General measures

60.4.2 Neurosurgical exam in trauma

60.5 Radiographic evaluation of TBI in the E/R

60.5.1 General information

60.5.2 Indications for initial brain CT

60.5.3 CT findings in trauma

60.5.4 Follow-up CT

60.5.5 Spine films

60.5.6 Skull X-rays

60.5.7 MRI scans in trauma

60.5.8 Arteriogram in trauma

60.6 E/R management for minor or moderate head injury

60.6.1 Indications for admission to the hospital vs. observation at home

60.6.2 Admitting orders for minor head injury (GCS ≥ 14)

60.6.3 Admitting orders for moderate head injury (GCS 9–13)

60.7 Patients with associated severe systemic injuries

60.7.1 Intra-abdominal injuries

60.7.2 Fat embolism syndrome

60.7.3 Indirect optic nerve injury

60.7.4 Posttraumatic hypopituitarism

60.8 Exploratory burr holes

60.8.1 General information

60.8.2 Indications

60.8.3 Management

60.8.4 Technique

60.9 References

61 Concussion, High-Altitude Cerebral Edema, Cerebrovascular Injuries

61.1 Concussion

61.1.1 General information

61.1.2 Epidemiology

61.1.3 Concussion genetics

61.1.4 Concussion—definition

61.1.5 Concussion versus mTBI

61.1.6 Risk factors for concussion

61.1.7 Diagnosis

61.1.8 Indications for imaging or other diagnostic testing in concussion

61.1.9 Acute pathophysiology

61.1.10 Post concussion syndrome (PCS)

61.1.11 Prevention of concussion

61.1.12 Management of concussion and post-concussion syndrome

61.1.13 Second impact syndrome (SIS)

61.1.14 Chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE)

61.2 Other TBI definitions and concepts

61.2.1 Contusion

61.2.2 Contrecoup injury

61.2.3 Posttraumatic brain swelling

61.2.4 Diffuse axonal injury (DAI) (AKA diffuse axonal shearing)

61.3 Posttraumatic hearing loss

61.3.1 Etiologies

61.3.2 Epidemiology

61.3.3 Clinical

61.4 High-altitude cerebral edema

61.5 Traumatic cervical artery dissections

61.5.1 General information

61.5.2 Epidemiology

61.5.3 Risk factors

61.5.4 Presentation

61.5.5 Evaluation of patients with risk factors or signs/symptoms of BCVI

61.5.6 Management of documented BCVI

61.5.7 Carotid artery blunt injuries

61.5.8 Vertebral artery blunt injuries

61.6 References

62 Neuromonitoring in Head Trauma

62.1 General information

62.2 Intracranial pressure (ICP)

62.2.1 Background

62.2.2 Cerebral perfusion pressure (CPP) and cerebral autoregulation

62.2.3 ICP principles

62.2.4 Normal ICP

62.2.5 Intracranial hypertension (IC-HTN)

62.2.6 ICP monitoring

62.3 Adjuncts to ICP monitoring

62.3.1 Jugular venous oxygen monitoring

62.3.2 Brain tissue oxygen tension monitoring (PbtO2)

62.3.3 Bedside monitoring of regional CBF (rCBF)

62.3.4 Cerebral microdialysis

62.4 Treatment measures for elevated ICP

62.4.1 General information

62.4.2 Treatment thresholds

62.4.3 ICP management protocol

62.4.4 ICP management protocol details

62.5 References

63 Skull Fractures

63.1 Types of skull fractures

63.2 Linear skull fractures over the convexity

63.3 Depressed skull fractures

63.3.1 Indications for surgery

63.3.2 Surgical treatment for depressed skull fractures

63.4 Basal skull fractures

63.4.1 General information

63.4.2 Some specific basal skull fracture types

63.4.3 Radiographic diagnosis

63.4.4 Clinical diagnosis

63.4.5 Management

63.5 Craniofacial fractures

63.5.1 Frontal sinus fractures

63.5.2 Le Fort fractures

63.6 Pneumocephalus

63.6.1 General information

63.6.2 Etiologies of pneumocephalus

63.6.3 Presentation

63.6.4 Differential diagnosis (things that can mimic pneumocephalus)

63.6.5 Tension pneumocephalus

63.6.6 Diagnosis

63.6.7 Treatment

63.7 References

64 Traumatic Hemorrhagic Conditions

64.1 Posttraumatic parenchymal injuries

64.1.1 Cerebral edema

64.1.2 Diffuse injuries

64.2 Hemorrhagic contusion

64.2.1 General information

64.2.2 Treatment

64.2.3 Delayed traumatic intracerebral hemorrhage (DTICH)

64.3 Epidural hematoma

64.3.1 General information

64.3.2 Presentation with EDH

64.3.3 Differential diagnosis

64.3.4 Evaluation

64.3.5 Treatment of EDH

64.3.6 Mortality with EDH

64.3.7 Special cases of epidural hematoma

64.4 Acute subdural hematoma

64.4.1 General information

64.4.2 CT scan in ASDH

64.4.3 Treatment

64.4.4 Morbidity and mortality with ASDH

64.4.5 Special cases of acute subdural hematoma

64.5 Chronic subdural hematoma

64.5.1 General information

64.5.2 Pathophysiology

64.5.3 Presentation

64.5.4 Imaging

64.5.5 Treatment

64.5.6 Outcome

64.6 Spontaneous subdural hematoma

64.6.1 General information

64.6.2 Risk factors

64.6.3 Etiology

64.6.4 Treatment

64.7 Traumatic subdural hygroma

64.7.1 General information

64.7.2 Pathogenesis

64.7.3 Presentation

64.7.4 Imaging

64.7.5 Treatment

64.7.6 Outcome

64.8 Extraaxial fluid collections in children

64.8.1 Differential diagnosis

64.8.2 Benign subdural collections of infancy

64.8.3 Symptomatic chronic extraaxial fluid collections in children

64.9 Traumatic posterior fossa mass lesions

64.9.1 General information

64.9.2 Posterior fossa subdural hematoma

64.9.3 Management

64.10 References

65 Gunshot Wounds and Non-Missile Penetrating Brain Injuries

65.1 Gunshot wounds to the head

65.1.1 General information

65.1.2 Primary injury

65.1.3 Secondary injury

65.1.4 Late complications

65.1.5 Evaluation

65.1.6 Management

65.2 Non-missile penetrating trauma

65.2.1 General information

65.2.2 Arrow injuries

65.2.3 Cases with foreign body still embedded

65.2.4 Indications for pre-op angiography

65.2.5 Surgical techniques

65.2.6 Post-op care

65.3 References

66 Pediatric Head Injury

66.1 Epidemiology of pediatric head injury and comparison to adults

66.2 Management

66.2.1 Imaging studies

66.2.2 Home observation

66.3 Outcome

66.4 Cephalhematoma

66.4.1 General information

66.4.2 Treatment

66.5 Skull fractures in pediatric patients

66.5.1 General information

66.5.2 Posttraumatic leptomeningeal cysts (growing skull fractures)

66.5.3 Depressed skull fractures in pediatrics

66.5.4 Dural sinus thrombosis/compression in pediatric skull fractures

66.6 Retroclival hematoma

66.6.1 General information

66.6.2 Presentation

66.6.3 Evaluation

66.6.4 Management

66.6.5 Outcome

66.7 Nonaccidental trauma (NAT)

66.7.1 General information

66.7.2 Shaken baby syndrome

66.7.3 Retinal hemorrhage (RH) in child abuse

66.7.4 Skull fractures in child abuse

66.8 References

67 Head Injury – Long-Term Management, Complications, Outcome

67.1 Airway management

67.2 Deep-vein thrombosis (DVT) prophylaxis

67.3 Nutrition in the head-injured patient

67.3.1 Summary of recommendations (see text for details)

67.3.2 Caloric requirements

67.3.3 Enteral vs. IV hyperalimentation

67.3.4 Enteral nutrition

67.3.5 Nitrogen balance

67.4 Posttraumatic hydrocephalus

67.4.1 General information

67.4.2 Differentiating true hydrocephalus from hydrocephalus ex vacuo

67.4.3 Indications for surgical treatment

67.5 Outcome from head trauma

67.5.1 Age

67.5.2 Outcome prognosticators

67.6 Late complications from traumatic brain injury

67.6.1 General information

67.6.2 Postconcussive syndrome

67.6.3 Chronic traumatic encephalopathy

67.7 References

Section XV Spine Trauma

68 Spine Injuries – General Information, Neurologic Assessment, Whiplash and Sports-Related Injuries, Pediatric Spine Injuries

68.1 Introduction

68.2 Terminology

68.2.1 Spinal stability

68.2.2 Level of injury

68.2.3 Completeness of lesion

68.3 Whiplash-associated disorders

68.3.1 General information

68.3.2 Clinical grading

68.3.3 Evaluation and treatment

68.3.4 Outcome

68.4 Pediatric spine injuries

68.4.1 General information

68.4.2 Pediatric cervical spine injuries and mimics

68.5 Cervical bracing

68.5.1 Soft collars

68.5.2 Rigid cervical collars

68.5.3 Poster braces

68.5.4 Cervicothoracic orthoses

68.5.5 Halo-vest brace

68.6 Follow-up schedule

68.7 Sports-related cervical spine injuries

68.7.1 General information

68.7.2 Football-related cervical spine injuries

68.7.3 Return to play and pre-participation guidelines

68.8 Neurological assessment

68.8.1 General information

68.8.2 Motor level assessment

68.8.3 Sensory level assessment (dermatomes and sensory nerves)

68.8.4 Rectal exam

68.8.5 Bulbocavernosus (BC) reflex

68.8.6 Additional sensory exam

68.8.7 ASIA impairment scale

68.9 Spinal cord injuries

68.9.1 Complete spinal cord injuries

68.9.2 Bulbar-cervical dissociation

68.9.3 Incomplete spinal cord injuries

68.10 References

69 Management of Spinal Cord Injury

69.1 Spinal trauma management – general information

69.2 Management in the field

69.3 Management in the hospital

69.3.1 Stabilization and initial evaluation

69.3.2 General information

69.3.3 Methylprednisolone

69.3.4 Hypothermia for spinal cord injury

69.3.5 Deep-vein thrombosis in spinal cord injuries

69.4 Radiographic evaluation and initial C-spine immobilization

69.4.1 Clinical criteria to rule out cervical spine instability

69.4.2 Cervical immobilization

69.4.3 Minimum radiographic evaluation

69.5 Traction/reduction of cervical spine injuries

69.5.1 General information

69.5.2 Application of tongs or halo ring

69.6 Timing of surgery following spinal cord injury

69.6.1 Early surgery for spinal cord compression

69.6.2 Timing of surgery other than for decompression

69.7 References

70 Occipitoatlantoaxial Injuries (Occiput to C2)

70.1 Atlantooccipital dislocation (AOD)

70.1.1 General information

70.1.2 Clinical presentation

70.1.3 Radiographic evaluation

70.1.4 Management

70.1.5 Prognosis

70.2 Occipital condyle fractures

70.2.1 General information

70.2.2 Diagnosis

70.2.3 Classification

70.2.4 Treatment

70.2.5 Outcome

70.3 Atlantoaxial (C1-2) subluxation/dislocation

70.3.1 General information

70.3.2 Atlantoaxial rotatory subluxation

70.3.3 Anterior atlantoaxial subluxation (AAS)

70.3.4 Atlantoaxial distraction injuries

70.4 Atlas (C1) fractures

70.4.1 General information

70.4.2 Clinical

70.4.3 Evaluation

70.4.4 Classification of C1 fractures

70.4.5 Treatment decisions

70.4.6 Surgical options

70.4.7 Outcome

70.5 Axis (C2) fractures

70.5.1 General information

70.5.2 Types of C2 fractures

70.5.3 Hangman’s fracture

70.5.4 Odontoid fractures

70.5.5 Miscellaneous C2 fractures

70.6 Combination C1 & C2 injuries

70.6.1 General information

70.6.2 Treatment

70.6.3 Outcome

70.7 References

71 Subaxial (C3 through C7) Injuries / Fractures

71.1 Classification systems

71.1.1 General information

71.1.2 Spine Trauma Study Group subaxial cervical spine injury classification (SLIC)

71.1.3 Cervical spine injury classification on the basis of mechanism of trauma

71.1.4 Stability model of White and Panjabi

71.2 Clay shoveler’s fracture

71.3 Vertical compression injuries

71.4 Flexion injuries of the subaxial cervical spine

71.4.1 General information

71.4.2 Compression flexion injuries

71.4.3 Teardrop fractures

71.4.4 Quadrangular fractures

71.5 Distraction flexion injuries

71.5.1 General information

71.5.2 Hyperflexion sprain

71.5.3 Subluxation

71.5.4 Locked facets

71.6 Extension injuries of the subaxial cervical spine

71.6.1 Extension injury without bony injury

71.6.2 Minor extension injuries

71.6.3 Extension compression injury

71.6.4 Lateral mass and facet fractures of the cervical spine

71.7 Treatment of subaxial cervical spine fractures

71.7.1 General information

71.7.2 Management overview

71.7.3 Surgical treatment

71.8 Spinal cord injury without radiographic abnormality (SCIWORA)

71.8.1 General information

71.8.2 Presentation of SCIWORA

71.8.3 Radiographic evaluation

71.8.4 Management

71.9 References

72 Thoracic, Lumbar, and Sacral Spine Fractures

72.1 Assessment and management of thoracolumbar fractures

72.1.1 General information

72.1.2 Three-column model

72.1.3 Thoracolumbar injury classification and severity score (TLICS)

72.2 Surgical treatment

72.2.1 Ligamentotaxis

72.2.2 Choice of surgical approach

72.2.3 Burst fractures

72.2.4 Wound infections

72.3 Osteoporotic spine fractures

72.3.1 General information

72.3.2 Bone physiology

72.3.3 Risk factors

72.3.4 Diagnostic considerations

72.3.5 Prevention of osteoporosis

72.3.6 Treatment of osteoporosis

72.4 Sacral fractures

72.4.1 General information

72.4.2 Classification

72.4.3 Treatment

72.5 References

73 Penetrating Spine Injuries and Long-Term Considerations of Spine Injuries

73.1 Gunshot wounds to the spine

73.1.1 General information

73.1.2 Indications for surgery

73.2 Penetrating trauma to the neck

73.2.1 General information

73.2.2 Vascular injuries

73.2.3 Classification

73.2.4 Evaluation

73.2.5 Treatment

73.3 Delayed cervical instability

73.3.1 General information

73.3.2 Etiologies

73.3.3 Indications for additional studies

73.4 Delayed deterioration following spinal cord injuries

73.5 Chronic management issues with spinal cord injuries

73.5.1 Overview

73.5.2 Respiratory management problems in spinal cord injuries

73.5.3 Autonomic hyperreflexia

73.6 References

Section XVI Non-Traumatic Spine and Spinal Cord Conditions

74 Low Back Pain

74.1 Low back pain – general information

74.2 Intervertebral disc

74.2.1 General information

74.2.2 Anatomy

74.2.3 Nomenclature for disc pathology

74.3 Clinical terms

74.4 Disability, pain, and outcome determinations

74.5 Differential diagnosis of low back pain

74.6 Initial assessment of the patient with back pain

74.6.1 Background

74.6.2 History

74.6.3 Physical examination

74.6.4 “Red flags” in the history and physical exam for low back problems

74.6.5 Special diagnostic tests

74.7 Radiographic evaluation

74.7.1 General information

74.7.2 Plain lumbosacral X-rays

74.7.3 Lumbosacral CT

74.7.4 MRI

74.7.5 Myelography

74.7.6 Bone scan for low back problems

74.7.7 Discography

74.7.8 Thermography for low back problems

74.8 Electrodiagnostics for low back problems

74.9 Psychosocial factors

74.10 Treatment

74.10.1 General information

74.10.2 “Conservative” treatment

74.10.3 Surgical treatment

74.11 Chronic low back pain

74.12 Coccydynia

74.12.1 General information

74.12.2 Etiologies

74.12.3 Evaluation

74.12.4 Treatment

74.12.5 Recurrence

74.13 Failed back surgery syndrome

74.13.1 General information

74.13.2 Etiologies

74.13.3 Arachnoiditis (AKA adhesive arachnoiditis)

74.13.4 Peridural scar

74.13.5 Treatment of failed back surgery syndrome

74.14 References

75 Lumbar Disc Herniation and Radiculopathy

75.1 General information

75.2 Pathophysiology

75.3 Herniation zones

75.3.1 General information

75.3.2 Central and paramedial disc herniations

75.3.3 Extreme lateral disc herniation

75.4 Other disc herniation variants

75.5 Clinical findings with hernaited lumbar disc

75.5.1 Characteristic findings on the history

75.5.2 Physical findings in radiculopathy

75.5.3 Cauda equina syndrome

75.6 Radiographic evaluation

75.7 Nonsurgical treatment

75.7.1 Natural history of lumbar disc herniation

75.7.2 Conservative treatment methodologies

75.8 Surgical treatment

75.8.1 General information

75.8.2 Indications for surgery

75.8.3 Surgical intervention

75.8.4 Surgical options for lumbar radiculopathy

75.8.5 Intradiscal surgical procedures (ISP)

75.8.6 Adjunctive treatment in lumbar laminectomy

75.8.7 Methods to reduce scar formation

75.8.8 Risks of lumbar laminectomy

75.8.9 Post-op care

75.8.10 Outcome of surgical treatment

75.9 Herniated upper lumbar discs (levels L1–2, L2–3, and L3–4)

75.9.1 General information

75.9.2 Presentation

75.9.3 Signs

75.10 Extreme lateral lumbar disc herniations

75.10.1 General information

75.10.2 Differential diagnosis

75.10.3 Radiographic diagnosis

75.10.4 Surgical treatment

75.11 Lumbar disc herniations in pediatrics

75.12 Intradural disc herniation

75.13 Intravertebral disc herniation

75.13.1 General information

75.13.2 Clinical findings

75.13.3 Radiographic findings

75.13.4 Treatment

75.13.5 Outcome

75.14 Recurrent herniated lumbar disc

75.14.1 General information

75.14.2 Treatment

75.15 Surgical treatment

75.16 Spinal cord stimulation

75.17 References

76 Thoracic Disc Herniation

76.1 General information

76.2 Evaluation

76.3 Indications for surgery

76.4 Surgical approaches

76.5 Choosing the approach

76.5.1 General information

76.5.2 Costotransversectomy

76.6 Surgical technique

76.6.1 Transpedicular approach

76.6.2 Transthoracic approach

76.6.3 Key technical points

76.6.4 Lateral retropleural approach

76.7 References

77 Cervical Disc Herniation

77.1 Cervical disc herniation – general information

77.2 Cervical nerve root syndromes (cervical radiculopathy)

77.2.1 General information

77.2.2 Miscellaneous clinical facts

77.3 Cervical myelopathy and SCI due to cervical disc herniation

77.4 Differential diagnosis

77.5 Physical exam for cervical disc herniation

77.5.1 Overview

77.5.2 Signs useful in evaluating cervical radiculopathy

77.6 Radiologic evaluation

77.6.1 MRI

77.6.2 CT and myelogram/CT

77.6.3 Electrodiagnostics (EMG and NCV)

77.7 Treatment

77.7.1 General information

77.7.2 Conservative management

77.7.3 Surgery

77.8 References

78 Cervical Degenerative Disc Disease and Cervical Myelopathy

78.1 Cervical disc degeneration – general information

78.2 Pathophysiology

78.3 Epidemiology/Natural history

78.4 Clinical

78.4.1 General information

78.4.2 Motor

78.4.3 Sensory

78.4.4 Reflexes

78.4.5 Sphincter

78.4.6 Cervical spondylotic myelopathy syndromes

78.4.7 Grading

78.5 Differential diagnosis

78.5.1 General information

78.5.2 Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS)

78.6 Evaluation

78.6.1 Plain X-rays

78.6.2 MRI

78.6.3 CT and CT/myelogram

78.6.4 EMG

78.6.5 Sensory evoked potentials (SEPs)

78.7 Treatment

78.7.1 Nonoperative management

78.7.2 Surgical treatment

78.8 Coincident cervical and lumbar spinal stenosis

78.9 Craniocervical junction and upper cervical spine abnormalities

78.9.1 Associated conditions

78.9.2 Types of abnormalities

78.9.3 Treatment

78.10 References

79 Spine Measurements

79.1 General information

79.2 Scoliosis measurements

79.3 Sagittal plane spine measurements

79.3.1 General information

79.3.2 Spino-pelvic alignment

79.3.3 Distribution of lumbar lordosis in normal sagittal alignment

79.4 References

80 Idiopathic Scoliosis

80.1 General information

80.2 Adolescent idiopathic scoliosis (AIS)

80.2.1 General information

80.2.2 Evaluation

80.2.3 AIS Classification (Lenke AIS Classification)

80.2.4 Treatment of AIS

80.3 Adult idiopathic scoliosis (AdIS)

80.3.1 General information

80.3.2 Radiographic evaluation

80.3.3 AdIS classification (Lenke AdIS classification)

80.3.4 Treatment of AdIS

80.4 References

81 Lumbar and Thoracic Degenerative Disc Disease

81.1 Degenerative disc disease

81.1.1 Definition and background

81.1.2 Anatomic substrate

81.1.3 Risk factors for degenerative disc (spine) disease

81.2 Lumbar spinal stenosis

81.2.1 General information

81.2.2 Neural spaces affected in lumbar spinal stenosis

81.2.3 Clinical evaluation of lumbar spinal stenosis

81.2.4 Neurogenic claudication

81.2.5 Differential diagnosis

81.2.6 Imaging evaluation of lumbar spinal stenosis

81.2.7 Adjuncts to radiographic evaluation

81.3 Spondylolisthesis

81.3.1 General information

81.3.2 Adolescent spondylolisthesis

81.3.3 Grading spondylolisthesis

81.3.4 Types of spondylolisthesis

81.3.5 Natural history

81.4 Juxtafacet cysts of the lumbar spine

81.4.1 General information

81.4.2 Pathology

81.4.3 Clinical

81.4.4 Evaluation

81.4.5 Treatment

81.5 Degenerative scoliosis

81.6 Treatment of lumbar spinal stenosis

81.6.1 General information

81.6.2 Management of isthmic spondylolisthesis

81.6.3 Indications for surgery

81.6.4 Surgery

81.7 Outcome

81.7.1 Morbidity/mortality

81.7.2 Nonunion

81.7.3 Success of operation

81.8 References

82 Adult Spinal Deformity and Degenerative Scoliosis

82.1 Adult spinal deformity – general information

82.2 Epidemiology

82.3 Clinical evaluation

82.4 Diagnostic testing

82.5 SRS-Schwab classification of adult degenerative spinal deformity

82.6 Treatment/management

82.6.1 Goals

82.6.2 Options

82.6.3 Correction of global spinal balance

82.6.4 Classification of surgical osteotomies

82.6.5 Surgical options for increasing lumbar lordosis

82.6.6 Guidelines for MIS treatment for ASD

82.6.7 Currently under investigation

82.6.8 Morbid obesity

82.7 References

83 Special Conditions Affecting the Spine

83.1 Paget’s disease of the spine

83.1.1 Pathophysiology

83.1.2 Malignant degeneration

83.1.3 Epidemiology

83.1.4 Common sites of involvement

83.1.5 Neurosurgical involvement

83.1.6 Presentation

83.1.7 Evaluation

83.1.8 Treatment

83.2 Ankylosing and ossifying conditions of the spine

83.2.1 Ankylosing spondylitis

83.2.2 Ossification of the posterior longitudinal ligament (OPLL)

83.2.3 Ossification of the anterior longitudinal ligament (OALL)

83.2.4 Forestier disease/diffuse idiopathic skeletal hyperostosis (DISH)

83.3 Scheuermann’s kyphosis

83.3.1 General information

83.3.2 Epidemiology

83.3.3 Etiology

83.3.4 Classification

83.3.5 Presentation

83.3.6 Evaluation

83.3.7 Radiographic findings

83.3.8 Treatment

83.4 Rheumatoid arthritis

83.4.1 General information

83.4.2 Cervical spine involvement in RA

83.4.3 Atlantoaxial subluxation (AAS) in RA

83.4.4 Surgical morbidity and mortality

83.4.5 Postoperative care

83.4.6 Basilar impression in rheumatoid arthritis

83.4.7 Subaxial subluxation in rheumatoid arthritis

83.5 Down syndrome

83.5.1 General information

83.5.2 Atlantoaxial subluxation (AAS) in Down syndrome

83.6 Spinal epidural lipomatosis (SEL)

83.6.1 General information

83.6.2 Evaluation

83.6.3 Treatment

83.6.4 Outcome

83.7 Miscellaneous conditions affecting the spine

83.7.1 Bertolotti’s syndrome

83.7.2 Spinal epidural hematoma (SEH)

83.7.3 Spinal subdural hematoma

83.7.4 Spinal cord infarction

83.7.5 Pneumorrhachis

83.7.6 Airport screening and spinal implants

83.7.7 Catheter tip granuloma

83.8 References

84 Special Conditions Affecting the Spinal Cord

84.1 Spinal vascular malformations

84.1.1 General information

84.1.2 Classification

84.1.3 Presentation

84.1.4 Evaluation

84.1.5 Treatment

84.2 Spinal cord cavernous malformations

84.3 Abnormalities involving spinal meninges

84.3.1 Spinal meningeal cysts

84.3.2 Spinal arachnoid cysts & spinal arachnoid webs (SAWs)

84.3.3 Pseudomeningocele

84.3.4 Hirayama disease

84.3.5 Spinal cord herniation (idiopathic)

84.4 Syringomyelia

84.4.1 General information

84.4.2 Etiologies

84.4.3 Epidemiology

84.4.4 Pathophysiology

84.4.5 Clinical

84.4.6 Evaluation

84.4.7 Distinguishing from similar entities

84.4.8 Management

84.4.9 Outcome

84.5 Posttraumatic syringomyelia

84.5.1 General information

84.5.2 Epidemiology

84.5.3 Clinical

84.5.4 Evaluation

84.5.5 Management

84.6 References

Section XVII Subarachnoid Hemorrhage and Aneurysms

85 Aneurysms – Introduction, Grading, Special Conditions

85.1 Introduction and overview

85.1.1 Definitions

85.1.2 Miscellaneous facts about SAH

85.1.3 Outcome of aneurysmal SAH

85.2 Etiologies of SAH

85.3 Incidence of aneurysmal SAH (aSAH)

85.4 Risk factors for aSAH

85.5 Clinical features

85.5.1 Symptoms of SAH

85.5.2 Headache

85.5.3 Signs

85.6 Work-up of suspected SAH

85.6.1 Overview

85.6.2 Laboratory/radiographic findings

85.7 Grading SAH

85.7.1 General information

85.7.2 Hunt and Hess grade

85.7.3 World Federation of Neurosurgical Societies / World Federation of Neurological Surgeons (WFNS) grading of SAH

85.8 Pregnancy and intracranial hemorrhage

85.8.1 General information

85.8.2 Management modifications for pregnant patients

85.8.3 Neurosurgical management

85.8.4 Obstetric management following ICHOP

85.9 Hydrocephalus after SAH

85.9.1 Hydrocephalus after traumatic SAH

85.9.2 Acute hydrocephalus

85.9.3 Chronic hydrocephalus

85.10 References

86 Critical Care of Aneurysm Patients

86.1 Initial management of SAH

86.1.1 General information

86.1.2 Monitors/tubes

86.1.3 Admitting orders

86.1.4 Blood pressure and volume management

86.1.5 Hyponatremia following aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage (aSAH)

86.1.6 Post-SAH seizures

86.2 Rebleeding

86.2.1 General information

86.2.2 Prevention of rebleeding

86.2.3 Antifibrinolytic therapy

86.3 Neurogenic stress cardiomyopathy (NSC)

86.3.1 General information

86.3.2 Arrhythmias and EKG changes

86.3.3 Possible mechanism

86.3.4 Treatment

86.4 Neurogenic pulmonary edema

86.4.1 General information

86.4.2 Pathophysiology

86.4.3 Treatment

86.5 Vasospasm (AKA cerebrovascular vasospasm)

86.5.1 General information

86.5.2 Definitions

86.5.3 Characteristics of cerebral vasospasm

86.5.4 Pathogenesis

86.5.5 Diagnosis of cerebral vasospasm

86.5.6 Treatment for vasospasm

86.5.7 Vasospasm management

86.6 Post-op orders for aneurysm clipping

86.7 References

87 SAH from Cerebral Aneurysm Rupture

87.1 Epidemiology of cerebral aneurysms

87.2 Etiology of cerebral aneurysms

87.3 Location of cerebral aneurysms

87.4 Natural history of cerebral aneurysms

87.5 Presentation of cerebral aneurysms

87.5.1 Major rupture

87.5.2 Presentation other than major rupture

87.6 Conditions associated with aneurysms

87.6.1 Overview

87.6.2 Autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease

87.7 Treatment options for aneurysms

87.7.1 General information

87.7.2 Therapies that do not directly address the aneurysm

87.7.3 Endovascular techniques to treat the aneurysm

87.7.4 Surgical treatment options for aneurysms

87.7.5 Treatment decisions: coiling vs. clipping

87.8 Timing of aneurysm surgery

87.8.1 Background

87.8.2 Conclusions

87.8.3 Imminent aneurysm rupture

87.9 General technical considerations of aneurysm surgery

87.9.1 General information

87.9.2 Aneurysmal rest

87.9.3 Surgical exposure

87.9.4 Intraoperative and postoperative angiography

87.9.5 Some drugs useful in aneurysm surgery

87.9.6 Intraoperative aneurysm rupture

87.9.7 Aneurysm recurrence after treatment

87.9.8 Follow-up after aneurysm treatment

87.10 References

88 Aneurysm Type by Location

88.1 Anterior communicating artery aneurysms

88.1.1 General information

88.1.2 CT scan

88.1.3 Angiographic considerations

88.1.4 Surgical treatment

88.2 Distal anterior cerebral artery aneurysms

88.2.1 General information

88.2.2 Treatment

88.3 Posterior communicating artery aneurysms

88.3.1 General information

88.3.2 Angiographic considerations

88.3.3 Surgical treatment

88.4 Carotid terminus (bifurcation) aneurysms

88.4.1 Angiographic considerations

88.4.2 Surgical considerations

88.5 Middle cerebral artery (MCA) aneurysms

88.5.1 General information

88.5.2 Surgical treatment

88.6 Cavernous carotid artery aneurysms (CCAAs)

88.6.1 General information

88.6.2 Presentation

88.7 Supraclinoid aneurysms

88.7.1 Applied anatomy

88.7.2 Ophthalmic segment aneurysms (OSAs)

88.7.3 Surgical treatment

88.8 Posterior circulation aneurysms

88.8.1 General information

88.8.2 Hydrocephalus

88.8.3 Vertebral artery aneurysms

88.8.4 PICA aneurysms

88.8.5 Vertebrobasilar junction aneurysms

88.8.6 Basilar bifurcation aneurysms

88.8.7 Basilar trunk aneurysms

88.9 References

89 Special Aneurysms and Non-Aneurysmal SAH

89.1 Unruptured aneurysms

89.1.1 General information

89.1.2 Presentation

89.1.3 Natural history

89.1.4 Management

89.2 Multiple aneurysms

89.3 Familial aneurysms

89.3.1 General information

89.3.2 Screening recommendations

89.3.3 Genetics

89.4 Traumatic aneurysms

89.4.1 General information

89.4.2 Presentation

89.4.3 Treatment

89.5 Mycotic aneurysms

89.5.1 General information

89.5.2 Epidemiology and pathophysiology

89.5.3 Evaluation

89.5.4 Treatment

89.6 Giant aneurysms

89.6.1 General information

89.6.2 Evaluation

89.6.3 Treatment

89.7 Cortical subarachnoid hemorrhage

89.8 SAH of unknown etiology

89.8.1 General information

89.8.2 Risk of rebleeding

89.8.3 Management

89.9 Pretruncal nonaneurysmal SAH (PNSAH)

89.9.1 General information

89.9.2 Presentation

89.9.3 Epidemiology

89.9.4 Relevant anatomy

89.9.5 Diagnostic criteria

89.9.6 Repeat angiography

89.9.7 Treatment

89.9.8 Long-term implications

89.10 References

Section XVIII Vascular Malformations

90 Vascular Malformations

90.1 Vascular malformations – general information and classification

90.2 Arteriovenous malformation (AVM)

90.2.1 General information

90.2.2 Description

90.2.3 Epidemiology

90.2.4 Presentation

90.2.5 Hemorrhage

90.2.6 Seizures

90.2.7 AVMs and aneurysms

90.2.8 Evaluation

90.2.9 Management

90.2.10 Treatment

90.2.11 Follow-up of treated AVMs

90.3 Developmental venous anomaly (DVA) (venous angioma)

90.3.1 General information

90.3.2 Presentation

90.3.3 Imaging

90.3.4 Treatment

90.4 Dural arteriovenous fistulae (DAVF)

90.4.1 General information

90.4.2 Etiology

90.4.3 Epidemiology

90.4.4 Presentation

90.4.5 Evaluation

90.4.6 Natural history

90.4.7 Management

90.5 Vein of Galen malformation

90.5.1 General information

90.5.2 Presentation

90.5.3 Classification

90.5.4 Natural history

90.5.5 Treatment

90.6 Carotid-cavernous fistula

90.6.1 General information

90.6.2 Presentation

90.6.3 Evaluation

90.6.4 Treatment

90.7 Sigmoid sinus diverticulum

90.8 References

91 Angiographically Occult Vascular Malformations

91.1 General information

91.1.1 Terminology

91.1.2 Etiologies

91.1.3 Epidemiology

91.1.4 Presentation

91.2 Osler-Weber-Rendu syndrome

91.2.1 General information

91.2.2 Epidemiology

91.2.3 Imaging

91.2.4 Treatment

91.3 Cavernous malformation

91.3.1 General information

91.3.2 Pathology

91.3.3 Epidemiology

91.3.4 Genetics

91.3.5 Presentation/natural history

91.3.6 Evaluation

91.3.7 Treatment/management

91.3.8 Prognosis

91.4 References

Section XIX Stroke and Occlusive Cerebrovascular Disease

92 Stroke – General Information and Physiology

92.1 Definitions

92.2 Cerebrovascular hemodynamics

92.2.1 Cerebral blood flow (CBF) and oxygen utilization

92.2.2 Cerebrovascular resistance (CVR) and cerebral autoregulation

92.2.3 Cerebral metabolic rate of oxygen consumption (CMRO2)

92.2.4 Cerebrovascular reserve and reactivity

92.3 Collateral circulation

92.3.1 Collateral circulation for ICA stenosis/occlusion

92.3.2 Collateral circulation for vertebrobasilar stenosis/occlusion

92.4 “Occlusion” syndromes

92.4.1 Occlusion of major vessels organized by vascular territories

92.4.2 Lacunar strokes

92.5 Stroke in young adults

92.5.1 General information

92.5.2 Etiologies

92.5.3 Risk factors

92.5.4 Evaluation

92.6 Atherosclerotic carotid artery disease

92.6.1 General information

92.6.2 Presentation

92.6.3 Evaluation of the extent of carotid disease

92.6.4 Treatment

92.7 References

93 Evaluation and Treatment for Acute Ischemic Stroke

93.1 Stroke management – general information (time = brain)

93.2 Rapid initial evaluation/management

93.3 NIH stroke scale (NIHSS)

93.4 General management for acute ischemic stroke (AIS)

93.4.1 Admitting orders

93.4.2 Hypertension in stroke patients

93.4.3 Antiplatelet drugs in AIS – additional info

93.4.4 Emergency surgery

93.5 Imaging in acute ischemic stroke (AIS)

93.5.1 CAT scan findings with acute ischemic stroke (AIS)

93.5.2 CT angio (CTA)

93.5.3 CT perfusion

93.5.4 MRI

93.5.5 MRI perfusion

93.6 Management of TIA or stroke

93.6.1 Treatment options timeline

93.6.2 Endovascular therapy for stroke

93.6.3 Thrombolytic therapy

93.7 Carotid endarterectomy

93.7.1 Indications

93.7.2 Timing with respect to acute stroke

93.7.3 Pre-op risk factors for CEA

93.7.4 Carotid endarterectomy—surgical considerations

93.7.5 Operative technique

93.7.6 Emergency carotid endarterectomy

93.8 Carotid angioplasty/stenting

93.8.1 General information

93.8.2 Indications for angioplasty/stenting

93.9 References

94 Cerebral Arterial Dissections and Moyamoya Disease

94.1 Cerebral Arterial Dissections

94.1.1 Cerebral arterial dissections – key concepts

94.1.2 Nomenclature

94.1.3 Pathophysiology

94.1.4 Epidemiology

94.1.5 Sites of dissection

94.1.6 Clinical

94.1.7 Evaluation

94.1.8 Overall outcome

94.1.9 Internal carotid dissection

94.1.10 Vertebrobasilar system artery dissection

94.1.11 Vertebrobasilar system dissections excluding the VA

94.2 Moyamoya disease

94.2.1 General information

94.2.2 Pathophysiology

94.2.3 Epidemiology

94.2.4 Presentation

94.2.5 Natural history

94.2.6 Evaluation and diagnosis

94.2.7 Treatment

94.3 References

95 Other Vascular Occlusive Conditions

95.1 Totally occluded internal carotid artery

95.1.1 General information

95.1.2 Presentation

95.1.3 Natural history

95.1.4 Endovascular thrombolysis and stenting for acute carotid occlusion

95.1.5 Surgery

95.1.6 Guidelines

95.2 Cerebellar infarction

95.2.1 General information

95.2.2 Early clinical findings

95.2.3 Later clinical findings

95.2.4 Imaging studies

95.2.5 Surgical indications

95.2.6 Suboccipital craniectomy for cerebellar infarction

95.3 Malignant middle cerebral artery territory infarction

95.3.1 General information

95.3.2 Hemicraniectomy for malignant MCA territory infarction

95.4 Cardiogenic brain embolism

95.4.1 General information

95.4.2 Diagnosis of cardiogenic brain embolism

95.4.3 Treatment

95.5 Vertebrobasilar insufficiency

95.5.1 General information

95.5.2 Symptoms

95.5.3 Pathophysiology

95.5.4 Natural history

95.5.5 Evaluation

95.5.6 Treatment

95.6 Bow hunter’s stroke

95.6.1 General information

95.6.2 Contributing factors

95.6.3 Diagnosis

95.6.4 Treatment

95.7 Cerebral venous thrombosis

95.7.1 General information

95.7.2 Etiologies

95.7.3 Relative frequency of venous structures involved

95.7.4 Pathophysiology

95.7.5 Clinical

95.7.6 Diagnosis of DST

95.7.7 Management of CVT

95.7.8 Prognosis

95.8 Extracranial-intracranial (EC/IC) bypass

95.8.1 The 1985 international EC/IC bypass study

95.8.2 Current state of affairs

95.8.3 Indications for EC/IC bypass

95.8.4 Bypass types

95.8.5 Perioperative complications of EC/IC bypass

95.9 References

Section XX Intracerebral Hemorrhage

96 Intracerebral Hemorrhage in Older Adults

96.1 Intracerebral hemorrhage – general information

96.2 Epidemiology

96.2.1 Incidence

96.2.2 Risk factors

96.3 Locations of hemorrhage within the brain

96.3.1 General information

96.3.2 Lobar hemorrhage

96.3.3 Internal capsule hemorrhages

96.4 Etiologies

96.4.1 Cerebellar hemorrhage etiologies

96.4.2 Hypertension as a cause?

96.4.3 Microaneurysms of Charcot-Bouchard

96.4.4 (Cerebral) amyloid angiopathy

96.4.5 Hemorrhagic brain tumors

96.4.6 Anticoagulation preceding ICH

96.5 Clinical

96.5.1 General information

96.5.2 Prodrome

96.5.3 Concomitants of specific lesions in ICH

96.5.4 Delayed deterioration

96.6 Evaluation

96.6.1 Overview

96.6.2 CT scan

96.6.3 CT angiography (CTA)

96.6.4 MRI

96.6.5 Catheter cerebral angiography

96.6.6 ICH score

96.7 Initial management of ICH

96.7.1 History checklist

96.7.2 Initial laboratory tests

96.7.3 Nonsurgical management outline

96.7.4 Anticoagulation following ICH

96.8 Ventriculostomy (IVC) with ICH

96.9 Surgical treatment

96.9.1 General information

96.9.2 Indications for surgery

96.9.3 Surgical considerations

96.10 Outcome

96.11 References

97 ICH in Young Adults and Pediatrics

97.1 ICH in young adults

97.1.1 General information

97.1.2 Outcome

97.2 Intracerebral hemorrhage in the newborn

97.2.1 General information

97.2.2 Etiology

97.2.3 Pathogenesis of PIVH in the pre-term infant

97.2.4 Risk factors for PIVH

97.2.5 Epidemiology

97.2.6 Prevention

97.2.7 Clinical

97.2.8 Pathophysiologic effects of PIVH

97.2.9 Diagnosis

97.2.10 Treatment

97.2.11 Outcome

97.3 Other causes of intracerebral hemorrhage in the newborn

97.4 References

Section XXI Outcome Assessment

98 Outcome Assessment

98.1 Cancer

98.2 Head injury

98.3 Cerebrovascular events

98.3.1 General information

98.3.2 Scales

98.4 Spinal cord injury

98.5 References

Section XXII Differential Diagnosis

99 Differential Diagnosis by Location or Radiographic Finding – Intracranial

99.1 Diagnoses covered outside this chapter

99.2 Posterior fossa lesions

99.2.1 Cerebellar lesions

99.2.2 Cerebellopontine angle (CPA) lesions

99.2.3 Petrous apex lesions

99.2.4 Foramen magnum lesions

99.3 Multiple intracranial lesions on CT or MRI

99.4 Ring-enhancing lesions on CT/MRI

99.4.1 Abscess vs. tumor

99.4.2 Short list

99.4.3 Long list

99.5 White matter lesions

99.5.1 Leukoencephalopathy

99.5.2 Corpus callosum lesions

99.6 Sellar, suprasellar, and parasellar lesions

99.6.1 General information

99.6.2 Tumors/pseudotumors

99.6.3 Vascular lesions

99.6.4 Inflammatory

99.6.5 Empty sella syndrome

99.6.6 Hypophysitis

99.7 Intracranial cysts

99.7.1 In general

99.7.2 Midline cavities

99.7.3 Cavum septi pellucidi (CSP) and cavum vergae (CV)

99.8 Orbital lesions

99.8.1 General information

99.8.2 Orbital lesions in adults

99.8.3 Orbital tumors in pediatrics

99.9 Dural sinus lesions

99.10 Cavernous sinus lesions

99.11 Meckel’s cave abnormalities

99.11.1 Etiologies

99.11.2 Evaluation

99.12 Skull lesions

99.12.1 General information

99.12.2 Radiolucent lesion or bone defect in skull (AKA lytic lesions)

99.12.3 Diffuse demineralization or destruction of the skull

99.12.4 “Hair-On-End” appearance in skull

99.12.5 Diffuse increased density, hyperostosis, or calvarial thickening

99.12.6 Focal increased density of skull base

99.12.7 Generalized increased density of skull base

99.12.8 Localized increased density or hyperostosis of the calvaria

99.13 Other abnormalities of the skull

99.13.1 Pneumocele

99.13.2 Frontal bossing

99.14 Combined intracranial/extracranial lesions

99.15 Intracranial hyperdensities

99.16 Intracranial calcifications

99.16.1 Single intracranial calcifications

99.16.2 Multiple intracranial calcifications

99.17 Intraventricular lesions

99.17.1 General information

99.17.2 Differential diagnosis

99.17.3 Features to help identify type of intraventricular lesions

99.18 Periventricular lesions

99.18.1 Periventricular solid enhancing lesions (in decreasing frequency)

99.18.2 Periventricular low density on CT, or high signal on T2WI MRI

99.19 Meningeal thickening/enhancement

99.19.1 Dural enhancement (intracranial)

99.19.2 Leptomeningeal enhancement

99.20 Ependymal and subependymal enhancement

99.21 Intraventricular hemorrhage

99.22 Medial temporal lobe lesions

99.23 Basal ganglion abnormalities

99.24 Thalamic lesions

99.25 Intranasal/intracranial lesions

99.26 References

100 Differential Diagnosis by Location or Radiographic Finding – Spine

100.1 Diagnoses covered outside this chapter

100.2 Atlantoaxial subluxation

100.3 Abnormalities in vertebral bodies

100.4 Axis (C2) vertebra lesions

100.5 Mass posterior to the odontoid process

100.6 Pathologic fractures of the spine

100.6.1 General information

100.6.2 Etiologies

100.6.3 Vertebra plana

100.7 Spinal epidural masses

100.8 Destructive lesions of the spine

100.8.1 Etiologies

100.8.2 Differentiating factors

100.9 Vertebral hyperostosis

100.10 Sacral lesions

100.10.1 Tumors

100.10.2 Infection

100.10.3 Arthritic disorders

100.10.4 Sacral fractures

100.10.5 Congenital

100.10.6 Miscellaneous

100.11 Enhancing nerve roots

100.12 Nodular enhancing lesions in the spinal canal

100.13 Intraspinal cysts

100.14 Diffuse enhancement of nerve roots/cauda equina

100.15 References

101 Differential Diagnosis (DDx) by Signs and Symptoms – Primarily Intracranial

101.1 Diagnoses covered outside this chapter

101.2 Encephalopathy

101.3 Syncope and apoplexy

101.3.1 General information

101.3.2 Etiologies

101.3.3 Practical approach to syncope

101.4 Transient neurologic deficit

101.5 Ataxia/balance difficulties

101.6 Wide-based gait

101.7 Diplopia

101.8 Anosmia

101.9 Multiple cranial nerve palsies (cranial neuropathies)

101.9.1 Framework

101.9.2 Specific syndromes

101.10 Binocular blindness

101.11 Monocular blindness

101.12 Exophthalmos

101.12.1 General information

101.12.2 Pulsatile

101.12.3 Non-pulsatile

101.13 Ptosis

101.14 Pathologic lid retraction

101.15 Macrocephaly

101.16 Tinnitus

101.16.1 General information

101.16.2 Pulsatile tinnitus

101.16.3 Non-pulsatile tinnitus

101.17 Facial sensory changes

101.18 Language disturbance

101.19 References

102 Differential Diagnosis (DDx) by Signs and Symptoms – Primarily Spine and Other

102.1 Diagnoses covered outside this chapter

102.2 Myelopathy

102.3 Sciatica

102.3.1 General information

102.3.2 Etiologies

102.3.3 Extraspinal tumors causing sciatica

102.3.4 Features differentiating radiculopathy in sciatica

102.4 Acute paraplegia or quadriplegia

102.4.1 General information

102.4.2 Etiologies

102.5 Hemiparesis or hemiplegia

102.5.1 General information

102.5.2 Etiologies

102.6 Ascending paralysis

102.7 Descending paralysis

102.8 Low back pain

102.8.1 General information

102.8.2 Acute low back pain

102.8.3 Subacute low back pain

102.9 Foot drop

102.9.1 General information

102.9.2 Underlying substrates of foot drop

102.9.3 Etiologies of foot drop

102.9.4 Clinical

102.9.5 Evaluation

102.10 Weakness/atrophy of the hands/UEs

102.10.1 Hand/UE weakness or atrophy with relatively preserved function in the LEs

102.10.2 Atrophy of the first dorsal interosseous muscle

102.11 Radiculopathy, upper extremity (cervical)

102.12 Neck pain (cervical pain)

102.13 Burning hands/feet

102.14 Glove/stocking sensory disturbance

102.15 Muscle pain/tenderness

102.16 Lhermitte’s sign

102.16.1 General information

102.16.2 Etiologies

102.17 Swallowing difficulties

102.18 References

Section XXIII Procedures, Interventions, Operations

103 Intraoperative Dyes, O.R. Equipment, Surgical Hemostasis, and Bone Extenders

103.1 Introduction

103.2 Intraoperative dyes

103.3 Operating room equipment

103.3.1 Operating microscope—observer’s eyepiece

103.3.2 Head stabilization

103.4 Surgical hemostasis

103.4.1 Basic options

103.4.2 Chemical hemostasis

103.5 Dural substitutes

103.6 Localizing levels in spine surgery

103.7 Bone graft

103.7.1 Use of bone graft extenders/substitutes as an adjunct to fusion

103.7.2 Assessing surgical lumbar fusion

103.7.3 Bone graft properties

103.7.4 Bone growth stimulators

103.7.5 Bone graft procurement

103.8 References

104 Craniotomies – General Information and Cortical Mapping

104.1 Craniotomy – general information

104.1.1 Cranial perforators

104.1.2 Intraparenchymal cyst aspiration

104.1.3 Intraoperative brain swelling

104.1.4 Craniotomy pre- and post-op management

104.1.5 Postoperative deterioration

104.1.6 Postoperative headache

104.2 Intraoperative cortical mapping (brain mapping)

104.2.1 General information

104.2.2 Phase reversal method for localizing primary sensory and motor cortex

104.2.3 Awake craniotomy

104.2.4 Speech mapping

104.3 References

105 Posterior Fossa Craniotomies

105.1 Indications

105.2 Position

105.2.1 Options

105.2.2 Sitting position

105.2.3 Lateral oblique position

105.3 Paramedian suboccipital craniectomy

105.3.1 Indications

105.3.2 Position, skin incision, craniectomy, approach…

105.3.3 Skin incision

105.3.4 Craniectomy

105.3.5 Approach to the cerebellopontine angle (CPA)

105.4 Midline suboccipital craniectomy

105.4.1 Indications

105.4.2 Position

105.4.3 Skin/fascia incision

105.4.4 Craniectomy

105.4.5 Approach

105.4.6 Approaches to the 4th ventricle

105.5 Extreme lateral posterior fossa approach

105.6 Cranioplasty for suboccipital craniectomy

105.7 Post-op considerations for p-fossa craniotomies

105.7.1 Post-op check

105.7.2 Post-op management

105.7.3 Post-op complications

105.8 References

106 Supratentorial Craniotomies

106.1 Pterional craniotomy

106.1.1 Indications

106.1.2 Technique

106.2 Temporal craniotomy

106.2.1 Indications

106.2.2 Technique

106.2.3 Position, skin incision, craniectomy, approach…

106.2.4 Craniotomies

106.3 Frontal craniotomy

106.3.1 Indications

106.3.2  Danger points

106.3.3 Technique

106.4 Petrosal craniotomy

106.4.1 Indications

106.4.2 Advantages

106.4.3 Technique

106.5 Occipital craniotomy

106.5.1 Indications

106.5.2 Positions

106.6 References

107 Approaches to the Lateral and Third Ventricles, Decompressive Craniectomies, and Cranioplasty

107.1 Approaches to the lateral ventricle

107.2 Approaches to the third ventricle

107.2.1 General information

107.2.2 General principles of tumor removal

107.2.3 Transcallosal approach to lateral or third ventricle

107.2.4 Transcortical approach to lateral or third ventricle

107.3 Interhemispheric approach

107.3.1 Indications

107.3.2 Technique

107.4 Cranioplasty

107.4.1 Indications/contraindications

107.4.2 Etiology of symptoms

107.4.3 Timing of cranioplasty

107.4.4 Material

107.4.5 Complications

107.4.6 Technique

107.5 Decompressive craniectomy

107.5.1 Indications

107.5.2 Potential complications

107.5.3 Techniques

107.6 References

108 Spine, Cervical

108.1 Anterior approaches to the cervical spine

108.2 Transoral approach to anterior craniocervical junction

108.2.1 General information

108.2.2 Transoral odontoidectomy

108.3 Occipitocervical fusion

108.3.1 Keel plate occipital-cervical fusion

108.3.2 Occipital condyle to C1 polyaxial screw fusion

108.3.3 Occipital–C1 (AKA atlantooccipital) transarticular screws

108.3.4 Post-op immobilization/bracing

108.4 Anterior odontoid screw fixation (OSF)

108.4.1 Introduction

108.4.2 Evaluation

108.4.3 Indications

108.4.4 Contraindications

108.4.5 Technique summary

108.5 Atlantoaxial fusion (C1–2 arthrodesis)

108.5.1 Indications

108.5.2 Technical considerations

108.5.3 Techniques of atlantoaxial fusion

108.6 C2 screws

108.6.1 Options

108.6.2 C2 pedicle (pars) screws

108.6.3 C3–6 fixation

108.6.4 C7 screws

108.6.5 Cervical laminoplasty

108.7 Anterior cervical vertebral body screw-plate fixation

108.8 Zero profile interbody devices

108.9 References

109 Spine, Thoracic and Lumbar

109.1 Anterior access to the thoracic spine

109.1.1 General information

109.1.2 Anterior access to the cervicothoracic junction/upper thoracic spine (T1, T2)

109.1.3 Anterior access to mid- and lower thoracic spine

109.1.4 Anterior access to thoracolumbar junction

109.2 Thoracic pedicle screws

109.2.1 General information

109.2.2 Fluoroscopy or laminotomy techniques for thoracic pedicle screw placement

109.2.3 Anatomic (“freehand”) thoracic pedicle screw placement technique

109.3 Uniform entry points for freehand pedicle screws

109.4 Anterior access to the lumbar spine

109.4.1 Anterior lumbar interbody fusion (ALIF)

109.5 Instrumentation/fusion pearls for the lumbar and lumbosacral spine

109.6 Lumbosacral pedicle screws

109.6.1 General information

109.6.2 Placement techniques

109.6.3 Open lumbar pedicle screw technique (see below for percutaneous placement)

109.6.4 Percutaneous pedicle screws

109.6.5 Pedicle-screw rod diameters

109.6.6 Pedicle screw breach classification

109.7 Lumbar cortical bone trajectory screw fixation

109.7.1 General information

109.7.2 Lumbar cortical bone trajectory screw technique

109.8 Translaminar lumbar screw fixation

109.9 Posterior lumbar interbody fusion (PLIF and TLIF)

109.10 Minimally invasive lateral retroperitoneal transpsoas interbody fusion

109.10.1 General information

109.10.2 Indications

109.10.3 Contraindications

109.10.4 Surgical technique (MIS retroperitoneal transpsoas approach)

109.10.5 Instrumented augmentation (pedicle screws or lateral plate)

109.10.6 Complications

109.10.7 Postoperative care

109.10.8 Outcomes

109.11 Transfacet pedicle screws

109.11.1 General information

109.11.2 Indications

109.11.3 Contraindications

109.11.4 Technique

109.12 Facet fusion

109.13 S2 screws

109.14 Iliac fixation

109.14.1 General information

109.14.2 Iliac screws

109.14.3 Percutaneous iliac screw

109.14.4 S2-alar-iliac screws (S2AI screws)

109.15 Post-op clinic visits—lumbar and/or thoracic spine fusion

109.15.1 Visit schedule

109.15.2 Post-op X-rays

109.16 References

110 Miscellaneous Surgical Procedures

110.1 Percutaneous ventricular puncture

110.1.1 Indications

110.1.2 Peds

110.1.3 Adult

110.2 Percutaneous subdural tap

110.2.1 Indications

110.2.2 Technique

110.3 Lumbar puncture

110.3.1 Contraindications

110.3.2 Technique

110.3.3 Laboratory analysis

110.3.4 Traumatic tap

110.3.5 Complications following LP

110.4 Lumbar catheter CSF drainage

110.4.1 General information

110.4.2 Indications

110.4.3 Contraindications

110.4.4 Insertion technique

110.4.5 Management

110.4.6 Complications

110.5 C1–2 puncture and cisternal tap

110.5.1 Indications

110.5.2 C1–2 puncture

110.5.3 Cisternal tap

110.6 Ventricular catheterization

110.6.1 General information

110.6.2 Indications

110.6.3 Procedure risks

110.6.4 Coagulation

110.6.5 Common ventricular catheter insertion sites

110.6.6 Ventriculostomy/ICP monitor – bedside insertion technique

110.7 CSF diversionary procedures

110.7.1 Ventricular shunts

110.7.2 Third ventriculostomy

110.7.3 LP shunt placement

110.8 Ventricular access device

110.8.1 General information

110.8.2 Indications

110.8.3 Technique of insertion

110.8.4 Reservoir puncture

110.9 Sural nerve biopsy

110.9.1 Indications & contraindications

110.9.2 Selection of nerve to be biopsied

110.9.3 Risks of procedure

110.9.4 Applied anatomy

110.9.5 Technique

110.9.6 Nerve handling

110.9.7 Post-op care

110.10 Nerve blocks

110.10.1 Stellate ganglion block

110.10.2 Lumbar sympathetic block

110.10.3 Intercostal nerve block

110.11 Multistranded cable for spine fusion

110.12 References

111 Functional Neurosurgery and Stereotactic Neurosurgery

111.1 Introduction

111.2 Stereotactic surgery

111.2.1 General information

111.2.2 Indications for stereotactic surgery

111.2.3 Stereotactic biopsy

111.3 Deep brain stimulation

111.3.1 General information

111.3.2 Surgical treatment of Parkinson’s disease

111.3.3 Tremor

111.3.4 Psychiatric disorders

111.3.5 Dystonia

111.3.6 Deep brain stimulation technique

111.4 Torticollis

111.4.1 General information

111.4.2 Etiologies

111.4.3 Non-surgical treatment of torticollis

111.4.4 Surgical procedures

111.4.5 Torticollis of 11th nerve origin

111.5 Spasticity

111.5.1 General information

111.5.2 Clinical

111.5.3 Treatment

111.6 Sympathectomy

111.6.1 Cardiac sympathectomy (angina pectoris)

111.6.2 Upper extremity sympathectomy

111.6.3 Upper thoracic sympathectomy

111.6.4 Lumbar sympathectomy

111.7 References

112 Neurovascular Compression Syndromes

112.1 General information

112.2 Trigeminal neuralgia

112.2.1 General information

112.2.2 Applied anatomy

112.2.3 Epidemiology

112.2.4 Pathophysiology

112.2.5 Tumors and trigeminal neuralgia

112.2.6 Differential diagnosis

112.2.7 Evaluation

112.2.8 Imaging

112.2.9 Medical therapy for trigeminal neuralgia

112.2.10 Miscellaneous drugs

112.2.11 Surgical therapy for trigeminal neuralgia

112.2.12 Percutaneous trigeminal rhizotomy (PTR)

112.2.13 Percutaneous microcompression rhizolysis balloon (PMC)

112.2.14 Results

112.2.15 Microvascular decompression (MVD) for trigeminal neuralgia

112.3 Hemifacial spasm

112.3.1 General information

112.3.2 Etiologies

112.3.3 Vascular compression

112.3.4 Evaluation

112.3.5 Treatment

112.3.6 Technique of MVD

112.3.7 Surgical results

112.4 Geniculate neuralgia

112.4.1 General information

112.4.2 Variants

112.4.3 Treatment

112.5 Disabling positional vertigo

112.6 Glossopharyngeal neuralgia

112.6.1 Epidemiology

112.6.2 Clinical

112.6.3 Treatment

112.7 Superior laryngeal neuralgia

112.8 References

113 Pain Procedures

113.1 Prerequisites for pain procedures

113.2 Choice of pain procedure

113.3 Types of pain procedures

113.4 Cordotomy

113.4.1 General information

113.4.2 Pre-op evaluation

113.4.3 Percutaneous cordotomy

113.4.4 Open cervical cordotomy (Schwartz technique)

113.5 Commissural myelotomy

113.5.1 General information

113.5.2 Indications

113.5.3 Technique

113.5.4 Outcome

113.5.5 Complications

113.6 CNS narcotic administration

113.6.1 Intraspinal narcotics

113.6.2 Intraventricular narcotics

113.7 Spinal cord stimulation (SCS)

113.7.1 General information

113.7.2 Indications/contraindications

113.7.3 Technique

113.7.4 Complications

113.7.5 Outcome

113.7.6 Specific syndromes treated

113.8 Deep brain stimulation (DBS)

113.9 Dorsal root entry zone (DREZ) lesions

113.9.1 General information

113.9.2 Technique

113.9.3 Post-op management

113.9.4 Complications

113.9.5 Outcome

113.10 References

114 Seizure Surgery

114.1 Indications for seizure surgery

114.1.1 General information

114.1.2 Types of seizures amenable to surgery

114.1.3 Surgical candidates for focal onset seizures

114.2 Definitions

114.3 Pre-surgical evaluation for seizure surgery

114.3.1 General information

114.3.2 Noninvasive evaluation techniques

114.3.3 Mildly invasive techniques

114.3.4 Evaluation techniques requiring surgery

114.4 Surgical techniques

114.4.1 Basic procedures

114.4.2 Anesthetic considerations

114.4.3 Intraoperative electrocorticography (ECoG)

114.4.4 Intraoperative cortical mapping

114.5 Surgical procedures

114.5.1 Corpus callosotomy

114.5.2 Mesial temporal lobe epilepsy (MTLE)

114.5.3 Selective amygdalo-hippocampectomy (SAH)

114.6 Risks of seizure surgery

114.7 Other ablation techniques

114.7.1 Radiofrequency ablation (RF ablation)

114.7.2 MRI-guided laser interstitial thermal therapy (MRGLITT)

114.7.3 Stereotactic radiosurgery (SRS) of mesial temporal lobe

114.8 Postoperative management for seizure surgery (epilepsy surgery)

114.9 Outcome

114.9.1 Outcome with resection of seizure focus

114.9.2 Radiosurgery for epilepsy

114.9.3 Vagus nerve stimulation (VNS)

114.10 References

115 Radiation Therapy (XRT)

115.1 Introduction

115.2 Conventional external beam radiation

115.2.1 Fractionation

115.2.2 Dosing

115.3 Cranial radiation

115.4 Spinal radiation

115.4.1 General information

115.4.2 Typical spinal radiation

115.4.3 Emergency spinal radiation

115.4.4 Side effects

115.5 Radiation injury and necrosis

115.5.1 General information

115.5.2 Pathophysiology

115.5.3 Etiology of side effects

115.5.4 Evaluation (differentiating RN from recurrent tumor)

115.5.5 Treatment

115.5.6 Prevention

115.5.7 Radiation myelopathy

115.6 Stereotactic radiosurgery and radiotherapy

115.6.1 General information

115.6.2 Indications

115.6.3 Contraindications

115.6.4 Treatment procedure

115.6.5 Lesion-specific issues

115.6.6 Treatment morbidity and mortality

115.7 Interstitial brachytherapy

115.7.1 General information

115.7.2 Techniques

115.7.3 Radiation necrosis

115.7.4 Outcome

115.8 References

116 Endovascular Intervention

116.1 Introduction

116.2 Indications/conditions treated

116.3 Contraindications

116.4 Risks of cerebral angiography

116.5 Miscellaneous angiography

116.6 Pharmacologic agents

116.6.1 General information

116.6.2 Abciximab (ReoPro)

116.6.3 Aspirin

116.6.4 Clopidogrel (Plavix™)

116.6.5 Eptifibatide (Integrilin®)

116.6.6 Heparin

116.6.7 Nitroglycerine

116.6.8 Papaverine

116.6.9 Sodium amytal

116.6.10 Tissue plasminogen activator (tPA, alteplase)

116.6.11 Verapamil

116.6.12 Xylocaine

116.7 Neuroendovascular procedure basics

116.7.1 Vascular access

116.7.2 Sheath management

116.7.3 Arteriotomy closure

116.8 Diagnostic angiography for cerebral subarachnoid hemorrhage

116.8.1 General information

116.8.2 Setup

116.8.3 Planning

116.9 Disease-specific intervention

116.9.1 Aneurysms

116.9.2 Endovascular management of vasospasm

116.9.3 Arteriovenous malformation

116.9.4 Dural arteriovenous fistulae (DAVF)

116.9.5 Carotid-cavernous fistulae (CCF)

116.9.6 Vertebrojugular fistulae (VJF)

116.9.7 Carotid dissection

116.9.8 Subclavian artery stenosis

116.9.9 Ischemic stroke

116.9.10 Cerebral venous thrombosis (CVT)

116.9.11 Chronic subdural hematoma

116.9.12 Tumor embolization

116.9.13 Refractory epistaxis

116.10 References

Index

 


An aparitie 19/04/2023
Autor Mark S. Greenberg
Dimensiuni 13.2 x 5.8 x 20.3 cm
Editura Thieme
Format Paperback
ISBN 9781684205042
Limba Engleza
Nr pag 1990

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