1.Ependymomas: Prognostic Factors and Outcome Analysis in a Retrospective Series of 33 Patients.
Yong Hyun CHAI ; Shin JUNG ; Jung Kil LEE ; In Young KIM ; Woo Youl JANG ; Kyung Sub MOON ; Jae Hyoo KIM ; Kyung Hwa LEE ; Seul Kee KIM ; Tae Young JUNG
Brain Tumor Research and Treatment 2017;5(2):70-76
BACKGROUND: The purpose of this study was to evaluate the prognostic factors and outcomes in patients with ependymoma to management plans. METHODS: Between 1997 and 2013, 33 patients with 25 ependymomas (WHO grade II) and eight anaplastic ependymomas (WHO grade III) were pathologically diagnosed. Six were pediatric patients (mean age, 6.15 years; range, 1.3–11 years), while 27 were adults (mean age, 47.5 years; range, 19–70 years). Of those, there were 12 adult patients with totally resected ependymomas without anaplastic pathology and adjuvant treatment. Prognostic factors were assessed in ependymoma patients. Prognostic factors were studied using Kaplan-Meier estimates in subgroups. RESULTS: For six pediatric patients, the progression-free survival (PFS) was 43.7±13.5 months, and the overall survival (OS) was 58.1±13.7 months. For 27 adult patients, the PFS was 125.6±14.3 months, and the OS was 151.2±12.5 months. Age demonstrated a statistically significant effect on PFS (p=0.03) and OS (p=0.03). In adult ependymomas, the extent of tumor removal significantly affected PFS (p=0.03) and trended towards an effect on OS (p=0.06). Out of 12 patients with totally resected ependymomas without anaplastic pathology and adjuvant treatment, one patient showed tumor recurrence during follow-up (mean, 93.5 months; range, 27.9–162.7 months). CONCLUSION: Adult patients with ependymomas were found to have better survival rates compared to pediatric patients. We suggest that totally resected adult ependymomas without anaplastic pathology could be observed without any adjuvant treatment, regardless of the tumor location.
Adult
;
Disease-Free Survival
;
Ependymoma*
;
Follow-Up Studies
;
Humans
;
Pathology
;
Prognosis
;
Radiotherapy
;
Recurrence
;
Retrospective Studies*
;
Survival Rate
2.Arachnoid Membrane Suturing for Prevention of Subdural Fluid Collection in Extracranial-intracranial Bypass Surgery.
Gun Woo KIM ; Sung Pil JOO ; Tae Sun KIM ; Hyung Sik MOON ; Jae Won JANG ; Bo Ra SEO ; Jung Kil LEE ; Jae Hyoo KIM ; Soo Han KIM
Journal of Cerebrovascular and Endovascular Neurosurgery 2014;16(2):71-77
OBJECTIVE: Water-tight closure of the dura in extracranial-intracranial (EC-IC) bypass is impossible because the superficial temporal artery (STA) must run through the dural defect. Consequently, subdural hygroma and subcutaneous cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) collection frequently occur postoperatively. To reduce these complications, we prospectively performed suturing of the arachnoid membrane after STA-middle cerebral artery (STA-MCA) and evaluated the clinical usefulness. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Between Mar. 2005 and Oct. 2010, extracranial-intracranial arterial bypass (EIAB) with/without encephalo-myo-synangiosis was performed in 88 cases (male : female = 53 : 35). As a control group, 51 patients (57 sides) underwent conventional bypass surgery without closure of the arachnoid membrane. Postoperative computed tomography (CT) scan was performed twice in three days and seven days later, respectively, for evaluation of the presence of subdural fluid collection and other mass lesions. RESULTS: The surgical result was excellent, with no newly developing ischemic event until recent follow-up. The additional time needed for arachnoid suture was five to ten minutes, when three to eight sutures were required. Post-operative subdural fluid collection was not seen on follow-up computed tomography scans in all patients. CONCLUSION: Arachnoid suturing is simple, safe, and effective for prevention of subdural fluid collection in EC-IC bypass surgery, especially the vulnerable ischemic hemisphere.
Arachnoid*
;
Cerebral Arteries
;
Cerebral Revascularization
;
Cerebrospinal Fluid
;
Female
;
Follow-Up Studies
;
Humans
;
Membranes*
;
Prospective Studies
;
Subdural Effusion
;
Sutures
;
Temporal Arteries
3.Clinical Analysis of Risk Factors Related to Recurrent Chronic Subdural Hematoma.
Byung Soo KO ; Jung Kil LEE ; Bo Ra SEO ; Sung Jun MOON ; Jae Hyoo KIM ; Soo Han KIM
Journal of Korean Neurosurgical Society 2008;43(1):11-15
OBJECTIVE: Burr hole drainage has been widely used to treat chronic subdural hematoma (CSDH). However, the incidence of recurrent CSDH varies from 3.7 to 30% after surgery. The authors attempted to elucidate the risk factors associated with the recurrence of CSDH in one burr hole drainage technique. METHODS: A total of 255 consecutive cases who underwent one burr hole drainage for CSDH were included in this study. Twenty-four patients (9.4%) underwent a repeated operation because of the recurrence of CSDH. We analyzed retrospectively the demographic, clinical and radiologic factors associated with the recurrence of CSDH. RESULTS: In this study, two risk factors were found to be independently associated with the recurrence of CSDH. The incidence of CSDH recurrence in the high- and mixed-density groups was significantly higher than those in the low- and iso-density groups (p<0.001). Bleeding tendency such as in leukemia, liver disease and chronic renal failure was also significantly associated with recurrence of CSDH (p=0.037). CONCLUSION: These results suggest that high- and mixed-density shown on computed tomographic scan was closely relates with a high incidence of recurrence. Therefore, the operation could be delayed in those cases unless severe symptoms or signs are present. Reoperation using the previous burr hole site is a preferred modality to treat the recurrent CSDH.
Drainage
;
Hematoma, Subdural, Chronic
;
Hemorrhage
;
Humans
;
Incidence
;
Kidney Failure, Chronic
;
Leukemia
;
Liver Diseases
;
Recurrence
;
Reoperation
;
Retrospective Studies
;
Risk Factors
4.Penetrating Gunshot Injuries to the Brain.
Tae Won KIM ; Jung Kil LEE ; Kyung Sub MOON ; Sung Pil JOO ; Jae Hyoo KIM ; Soo Han KIM
Journal of Korean Neurosurgical Society 2007;41(1):16-21
OBJECTIVE: Civilian gunshot injuries to the brain are relatively rare and study of these injuries has been neglected in South Korea. We present our experience with penetrating gunshot injuries to the brain and review the outcome of surgical management, as well as other clinical predictors influencing the prognosis. METHODS: We present a retrospective analysis of 13 patients with penetrating gunshot injuries to the brain who were treated at our hospital over a period of 22 years. RESULTS: The Glasgow Coma Scale(GCS) score on admission was recorded to be : 3-5 in 1 patient, 6-8 in 3 patients, 9-12 in 2 patients and 13-15 in 7 patients. There were 11 patients who underwent surgical treatment, and the surgical mortality rate was 0%. The admission GCS score was the most valuable prognostic factor. The best results were found to be in patients admitted with an initial GCS higher than 13. There were no favorable outcomes in patients admitted with a GCS of 8 or lower. There was a correlation between the presence of a transventricular or bihemispheric trajectory and poor outcome. The patients admitted with unilobar wounds resulted in better outcome than those with bilobar or multilobar wounds. Retained deep intracranial bone or metal fragments were the most common postoperative complication. However, retained fragments did not increase the risk of infection or seizure. CONCLUSION: Our results suggest that a less aggressive approach, consisting of minimal local debridement and removal of the bone and metal fragments that are easily accessible, can be successfully used in civilian gunshot wounds to the brain.
Brain Injuries
;
Brain*
;
Coma
;
Debridement
;
Glasgow Coma Scale
;
Humans
;
Korea
;
Mortality
;
Postoperative Complications
;
Prognosis
;
Retrospective Studies
;
Seizures
;
Wounds and Injuries
;
Wounds, Gunshot
5.Posterior Atlantoaxial Transarticular Screw Fixation.
Byung Su KO ; Jung Kil LEE ; Yeon Seong KIM ; Sung Jun MOON ; Jae Hyoo KIM ; Soo Han KIM
Journal of Korean Neurosurgical Society 2007;42(3):179-183
OBJECTIVE: Posterior arthrodesis in atlantoaxial instability has been performed using various posterior C1-2 wiring techniques. Recently, transarticular screw fixation (TASF) technique was introduced to achieve significant immediate stability of the C1-2 joint complex. The purpose of this study is to assess the clinical outcomes associated with posterior C1-2 TASF for the patient of atlantoaxial instability. METHODS: We retrospectively reviewed data obtained from 17 patients who underwent C1-2 TASF and supplemented Posterior wiring technique (PWT) with graft between 1994 and 2005. There were 8 men and 9 women with a mean age of 43.5 years (range, 12-65 years). An average follow-up was 26 months (range, 15-108 months). RESULTS: Successful fusions were achieved in 16 of 17 (94%). The pain was improved markedly (3 patients) or resolved completely (14 patients). There was no case of neurological deterioration, hypoglossal nerve injury, or vertebral artery injury. Progression of spinal deformity, screw pullout or breakage, and neurological or vascular complications did not occur. CONCLUSION: The C1-2 TASF with supplemental wiring provided a high fusion rate. Our result demonstrates that C1-2 TASF supplemented by PWT is a safe and effective procedure for atlantoaxial instability. Preoperative evaluation and planning is mandatory for optimal safety.
Arthrodesis
;
Congenital Abnormalities
;
Female
;
Follow-Up Studies
;
Humans
;
Hypoglossal Nerve Injuries
;
Joints
;
Male
;
Retrospective Studies
;
Transplants
;
Vertebral Artery
6.Posterior Atlantoaxial Transarticular Screw Fixation.
Byung Su KO ; Jung Kil LEE ; Yeon Seong KIM ; Sung Jun MOON ; Jae Hyoo KIM ; Soo Han KIM
Journal of Korean Neurosurgical Society 2007;42(3):179-183
OBJECTIVE: Posterior arthrodesis in atlantoaxial instability has been performed using various posterior C1-2 wiring techniques. Recently, transarticular screw fixation (TASF) technique was introduced to achieve significant immediate stability of the C1-2 joint complex. The purpose of this study is to assess the clinical outcomes associated with posterior C1-2 TASF for the patient of atlantoaxial instability. METHODS: We retrospectively reviewed data obtained from 17 patients who underwent C1-2 TASF and supplemented Posterior wiring technique (PWT) with graft between 1994 and 2005. There were 8 men and 9 women with a mean age of 43.5 years (range, 12-65 years). An average follow-up was 26 months (range, 15-108 months). RESULTS: Successful fusions were achieved in 16 of 17 (94%). The pain was improved markedly (3 patients) or resolved completely (14 patients). There was no case of neurological deterioration, hypoglossal nerve injury, or vertebral artery injury. Progression of spinal deformity, screw pullout or breakage, and neurological or vascular complications did not occur. CONCLUSION: The C1-2 TASF with supplemental wiring provided a high fusion rate. Our result demonstrates that C1-2 TASF supplemented by PWT is a safe and effective procedure for atlantoaxial instability. Preoperative evaluation and planning is mandatory for optimal safety.
Arthrodesis
;
Congenital Abnormalities
;
Female
;
Follow-Up Studies
;
Humans
;
Hypoglossal Nerve Injuries
;
Joints
;
Male
;
Retrospective Studies
;
Transplants
;
Vertebral Artery
7.Pituitary Apoplexy: Surgical Experience with 16 Patients.
Jae Hyun LEE ; Jae Hyoo KIM ; Kyung Sub MOON ; Sung Pil JOO ; Jung Kil LEE ; Soo Han KIM
Journal of Korean Neurosurgical Society 2007;42(2):83-88
OBJECTIVE: Pituitary apoplexy, resulting from an acute infarction or hemorrhage mainly in pituitary adenomas, is a rare yet major clinical event with neurological, ophthalmological and hormonal emergent consequences. The authors review our surgical experience with a series of 16 cases of pituitary apoplexy. METHODS: The cases of pituitary apoplexy, operated via trans-sphenoidal approach in our hospital between 1998-2005, were retrospectively analyzed in terms of their clinicoradiological features, pathological findings and surgical outcomes. RESULTS: The mean age of patients (9 male and 7 female) was 47.1 years. The average time of presentation after onset of symptom was 8.9 days. Pituitary apoplexy occurred as an initial manifestation of pituitary adenoma in all patients. Headache was the most common presenting symptom (94%). Visual disturbance was found in 56% of patients. Thirty-one percent of the patients had hypopituitarism. On magnetic resonance imaging, this entire catastrophic event accompanied with macroadenoma in a mean size of 22.5 mm. Only four patients needed postoperative hormone replacement therapy. Three of them showed preoperative hypopituitary function, and one patient in normal pituitary function. There was no specific complication in any of these patients. CONCLUSION: Early trans-sphenoidal decompression with high-dose corticosteroid replacement showed good outcomes of pituitary apoplexy.
Decompression
;
Headache
;
Hemorrhage
;
Hormone Replacement Therapy
;
Humans
;
Hypopituitarism
;
Infarction
;
Magnetic Resonance Imaging
;
Male
;
Pituitary Apoplexy*
;
Pituitary Neoplasms
;
Retrospective Studies
8.Photochemically Induced Cerebral Ischemia in a Mouse Model.
Sung Ku PARK ; Jung Kil LEE ; Kyung Sub MOON ; Sung Pil JOO ; Jae Hyoo KIM ; Soo Han KIM
Journal of Korean Neurosurgical Society 2006;40(3):180-185
OBJECTIVE: Middle cerebral artery occlusion(MCAO) has widely been used to produce ischemic brain lesions. The lesions induced by MCAO tend to be variable in size because of the variance in the collateral blood supply found in the mouse brain. To establish a less invasive and reproducible focal ischemia model in mice, we modified the technique used for rat photothrombosis model. METHODS: Male C57BL/6 mice were subjected to focal cerebral ischemia by photothrombosis of cortical microvessels. Cerebral infarction was produced by intraperitoneal injection of Rose Bengal, a photosensitive dye and by focal illumination through the skull. Motor impairment was assessed by the accelerating rotarod and staircase tests. The brain was perfusion-fixed for histological determination of infarct volume four weeks after stroke. RESULTS: The lesion was located in the frontal and parietal cortex and the underlying white matter was partly affected. A relatively constant infarct volume was achieved one month after photothrombosis. The presence of the photothrombotic lesion was associated with severe impairment of the motor performance measured by the rotarod and staircase tests. CONCLUSION: Photothrombotic infarction in mice is highly reproducible in size and location. This procedure can provide a simple method to produce cerebral infarction in a unilateral motor cortex lesion. In addition, it can provide a suitable model for study of potential neuroprotective and therapeutic agents in human stroke.
Animals
;
Brain
;
Brain Ischemia*
;
Cerebral Infarction
;
Humans
;
Infarction
;
Injections, Intraperitoneal
;
Ischemia
;
Lighting
;
Male
;
Mice*
;
Microvessels
;
Middle Cerebral Artery
;
Motor Cortex
;
Rabeprazole
;
Rats
;
Rose Bengal
;
Skull
;
Stroke
9.Early Closed Reduction in Patients with Cervical Fracture-Dislocation Injury without Prior Magnetic Resonance Imaging.
Sung Jun MOON ; Soo Han KIM ; Jung Kil LEE ; In Young KIM ; Jae Hyoo KIM ; Je Hyuk LEE
Journal of Korean Neurosurgical Society 2002;32(2):107-111
OBJECTIVE: We report an evaluation of incidence of the traumatic disc herniation and an effect of early closed reduction without prior magnetic resonance(MR) imaging in cervical spine fracture-dislocation injury. METHODS: The medical records and radiologic images of twenty consecutive traumatic cervical spine injury from the C2-3 to C7-T1 were reviewed. The disc injury on MR images was divided into two category: a herniation defined as deforming the thecal sac or nerve root and a disruption defined as a disc with high T2-weighted signal characteristics. Closed reduction was attempted in all patients and neurologic status was measured on admission and following reduction. MR image was obtainted within three days after early closed reduction. RESULTS: Early closed reduction by Gardner-Wells skeletal traction and serial plain radiography was achieved in 90% of patients and there was no associated neurological deterioration after reduction. The incidence of disc injury at the level of the fracture subluxation on the postreduction MR images was 60%(herniation-30%, disruption-30%), but the presence of disc herniation or disruption did not affect the degree of neurological recovery, as measured by American Spinal Injury Association(ASIA) motor score and the Frankel scale following early closed reduction. The average ASIA motor score prior reduction was 48.4 compared with 62.5 following reduction. CONCLUSION: Although disc herniation and disruption can occur following traumatic cervical fracture-dislocation, the actual incidence of neurological deterioration following early closed reduction is rare. Therefore, immediate closed reduction using traction in patients with any neurological deficit can be safe and effective before MR imaging.
Asia
;
Humans
;
Incidence
;
Magnetic Resonance Imaging*
;
Medical Records
;
Radiography
;
Spinal Injuries
;
Spine
;
Traction
10.Study on the Protective Effects of 6R-Tetrahydrobiopterin on the Oxidative Neuronal Injury in Mouse Cortical Cultures.
Kyung Sub MOON ; Je Hyuk LEE ; Sam Suk KANG ; Soo Han KIM ; Jae Hyoo KIM ; Shin JUNG ; Tae Sun KIM ; Jung Kil LEE
Journal of Korean Neurosurgical Society 2001;30(9):1059-1064
OBJECTIVE: 6R-Tetrahydrobiopterin(BH4) is a cofactor for the aromatic amino acid hydroxylases which is essential for the biosynthesis of catecholamines and serotonin. It also acts as a cofactor for nitric oxide synthase, and stimulates the release of some neurotransmitters such as dopamine, serotonin, acetylcholine and glutamate. Recently, it has been reported that BH4 could induce cellular proliferation and enhance neuronal survival. This study was performed to investigate the antioxidative effect of BH4 on the various oxidative insults in mouse cerebral cortical cell cultures. METHODS: Iron ion(FeCl2), zinc ion(ZnCl2), sodium nitroprusside(SNP) and buthionine sulfoximine(BSO, a glutathione depletor) were used as oxidants. Cell death was assessed by measurement of lactate dehydrogenase efflux to bathing media at the end of exposure. RESULT: All 4 oxidants induced neuronal cell death associated with cell body swelling, which was markedly inhibited by trolox(100nM), a vitamin E analog. BH4(10-100nM) markedly inhibited the neuronal cell death induced by all 4 oxidants(20nM Cu2+, 20nM Zn2+, 1nM SNP or 1mM BSO). However, BH4 failed to inhibit the neuronal cell death induced by 24hr exposure to 20nM NMDA. CONCLUSION: These results suggest that BH4 has antioxidative action independently of any actions of enzyme cofactor.
Acetylcholine
;
Amino Acids, Aromatic
;
Animals
;
Baths
;
Catecholamines
;
Cell Culture Techniques
;
Cell Death
;
Cell Proliferation
;
Dopamine
;
Glutamic Acid
;
Glutathione
;
Iron
;
L-Lactate Dehydrogenase
;
Mice*
;
Mixed Function Oxygenases
;
N-Methylaspartate
;
Neurons*
;
Neurotransmitter Agents
;
Nitric Oxide Synthase
;
Oxidants
;
Serotonin
;
Sodium
;
Vitamin E
;
Vitamins
;
Zinc

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