1.Infection of Cranioplasty Seen Twenty Years Later.
Mehmet Sabri GURBUZ ; Ozgur CELIK ; Mehmet Zafer BERKMAN
Journal of Korean Neurosurgical Society 2012;52(5):498-500
Cranioplasty is performed using autograft and allograft materials on patients to whom craniectomy was applied previously due to the facts that, this region is open to trauma and the scalp makes irritation and pressure onto the brain paranchyma causing brain atrophy and convulsions. Dramatical improvement of neurological deficits, control of convulsions and partial prevention of cerebral atrophy are achieved after these operations. One of the most important complications of cranioplasty is late infection. Here, we report a 43-year-old male patient admitted with the history of purulant discharge from the right temporal incission site for one year to whom cranioplasty had been performed with allograft material 20 days after craniectomy which had been performed in 1989. Allograft cranioplasty material was removed and cranioplasty was performed using new allograft material with the diagnosis of late cranioplasty infection.
Atrophy
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Brain
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Humans
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Male
;
Scalp
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Seizures
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Transplantation, Homologous
2.Foramen Magnum Decompression and Duraplasty is Superior to Only Foramen Magnum Decompression in Chiari Malformation Type 1 Associated with Syringomyelia in Adults.
Mehmet Sabri GURBUZ ; Mehmet Zafer BERKMAN ; Emre UNAL ; Elif AKPINAR ; Sevki GOK ; Metin ORAKDOGEN ; Salih AYDIN
Asian Spine Journal 2015;9(5):721-727
STUDY DESIGN: Retrospective cohort study. PURPOSE: To compare surgical results of foramen magnum decompression with and without duraplasty in Chiari malformation type 1 (CM-1) associated syringomyelia (SM). OVERVIEW OF LITERATURE: The optimal surgical treatment of CM-1 associated with SM is unclear. METHODS: Twenty-five cases of CM-1 with SM were included. There were 12 patients (48%) in the non-duraplasty group and 13 patients (52%) in the duraplasty group. The rate of improvement, state of postoperative SM size, amount of tonsillar herniation, preoperative symptom duration, complications and reoperation rates were analysed. RESULTS: The rate of clinical improvement was significantly higher with duraplasty (84.6%) than without (33.3%, p <0.05). The rate of postoperative syrinx regression was significantly higher in the duraplasty group (84.6%) than in the non-duraplasty group (33.3%, p <0.05). One case in the duraplasty group needed a reoperation compared with five cases in the non-duraplasty group (p =0.059). CONCLUSIONS: Duraplasty is superior to non-duraplasty in CM-1 associated with SM despite a slightly higher complication rate.
Adult*
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Cohort Studies
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Decompression*
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Encephalocele
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Foramen Magnum*
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Humans
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Reoperation
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Retrospective Studies
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Syringomyelia*