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  • 1
    ISSN: 1432-1920
    Keywords: Key words Surgery ; trans-sphenoidal ; Cerebrospinal fluid fistula ; Computed tomography
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract Cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) leakage after trans-sphenoidal surgery is a troublesome complication with a risk of meningitis and pneumocephalus. We suggest CT-guided intrasphenoidal injection of fibrin sealant through a 12-gauge needle as a simple alternative to surgical management of CSF fistulae. We treated eight patients, operated via the trans-sphenoidal route (five pituitary adenomas, three craniopharyngiomas), for a postoperative CSF leak by CT-guided intrasphenoidal injection of fibrin sealant alone in three cases and fibrin sealant and autologous blood in 5. CT was obtained 10 days after the procedure in all cases. In four patients, the CSF leak was closed successfully at the first attempt. The procedure was repeated on the four remaining patients because only a reduction in leakage was obtained at the first attempt. This procedure preserves olfaction and avoids the risk of frontal lobe damage. It could therefore represent the treatment of choice in many cases of anterior cranial fossa postsurgical CSF leaks.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Child's nervous system 11 (1995), S. 97-101 
    ISSN: 1433-0350
    Keywords: Fetus ; Hydrocephalus ; Etiology
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract We investigated the etiology of hydrocephalus present at birth, i.e. of fetal hydrocephalus. Both inherited and dysraphic major malformations are very rare. Intraventricular hemorrhages and viral infections during pregnancy are among the proposed etiologies; they are supported more by anatomical, physiopathological and experimental findings than by clinical evidence. Cases of fetal intraventricular hemorrhages cited in the literature are anecdotical, and the reports fail to identify maternal or fetal predisposing factors. The role of viruses in the etiology of connatal hydrocephalus has been postulated on the basis of epidemiological considerations in human pathology and of a considerable amount of experimental studies in animals. Investigations were generally focused on aqueduct ependyma, but research should also address other structures involved in the genesis of hydrocephalus (choroid plexus, extraventricular CSF pathways, including arachnoid villi). Furthermore, experimental evidence has emerged concerning a number of toxins and of drugs administered during pregnancy, which are thought to be involved in the genesis of hydrocephalus: once more, the conclusions reached in these experimental trials lend further credence to the human epidemiological data linking pregnancy disturbances with fetal hydrocephalus. Since most of these toxic agents are also thought to induce major malformations, we could assume the degree of their effect to depend on the embryonal stage affected: the earlier the action, the worse the malformation.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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