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Öğe Contralateral subdural effusion after aneurysm surgery and decompressive craniectomy: case report and review of the literature(Elsevier Science Bv, 2005) Kilincer, C; Simsek, O; Hamamcioglu, MK; Hicdonmez, T; Cobanoglu, SWe report a complication of decompressive craniectomy in the treatment of aneurismal subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH) and accompanying middle cerebral artery (MCA) infarction. A 56-year-old man presented with subarachnoid hemorrhage and right sylvian hematoma. He was diagnosed with high-grade SAH and medical therapy was employed. He showed rapid clinical deterioration on day 9 of his admission. Computed tomographic scans showed right MCA infarction and prominent midline shift. Because of the patient's rapidly worsening condition, further evaluation to find origin of SAH could not be obtained, and decompressive right hemicraniectomy was performed. During sylvian dissection, right middle cerebral and posterior communicant artery aneurysms were detected and clipped. One week after operation, a contralateral frontoparietal subdural effusion and left to right midline shift was detected and drained through a burr-hole. Through successive percutaneous aspirations, effusion recurred and complete resolution was achieved after cranioplasty and subduroperitoneal shunt procedures. Decompressive craniectomy is generally accepted as a technically simple operation with a low incidence of complications. In the light of this current case, we hypothesize that a large craniectomy may facilitate the accumulation of recurrent effusion on contralateral side creating a resistance gradient between two hemispheres. This point may be especially true for subarachnoid hemorrhage cases requiring aneurysm surgery. We conclusively suggest that subdural effusions may be resistant to simple drainage techniques if a large contralateral craniectomy does exist, and early cranioplasty may be required for treatment in addition to drainage procedures. (c) 2004 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.Öğe Factors affecting the outcome of decompressive craniectomy for large hemispheric infarctions: a prospective cohort study(Springer Wien, 2005) Kilincer, C; Asil, T; Utku, U; Hamamcioglu, MK; Turgut, N; Hicdonmez, T; Simsek, OBackground. Although surgical decompression of large hemispheric infarction is often a life-saving procedure, many patients remain functionally dependent. The aims of this study were to identify specific factors that can be used to predict functional outcome, thus establish predictive criteria to reduce poor surgical results. Method. In this non-randomized prospective study, we performed decompressive craniectomy in 32 patients (age range, 27 to 77 years) with large hemispheric infarctions. Based on their modified Rankin Score (RS), which was calculated 6 months postoperatively, patients were divided into two functional groups: good (RS 0-3, n = 7) and poor (RS 4-6, n = 25). The characteristics of the two groups were compared using statistical analysis. Findings. One-month mortality was 31%. However, most of the surviving patients were severely disabled (RS 4 or 5), and 6-month total mortality reached 50%. Increased age (>= 60 years) (P = 0.010), preoperative midline shift greater than 10 mm (P = 0.008), low preoperative Glasgow Coma Score (GCS <= 7) (P = 0.002), presence of preoperative anisocoria (P = 0.032), early (within the first three days of the stroke) clinical deterioration (P = 0.032), and an internal carotid artery infarct (P = 0.069) were the positive predictors of a poor outcome. Interpretation. We view decompressive craniectomy for space-occupying large hemispheric infarction as a life-sparing procedure that sometimes yields good functional outcomes. A dominant hemispheric infarction should not be an exclusion criterion when deciding to perform this operation. Early operation and careful patient selection based on the above-mentioned factors may improve the functional outcome of surgical management for large hemispheric infarction.Öğe A laboratory training model for interhemispheric-transcallosal approach to the lateral ventricle(Springer, 2006) Hicdonmez, T; Hamamcioglu, MK; Parsak, T; Cukur, Z; Cobanoglu, SLaboratory training models are essential for developing and refining surgical skills before clinical application of microneurosurgery. Our aim is to train residents of neurosurgery to be familiar with a basic microneurosurgical technique in access to the lateral ventricle via a transcallosal approach. The training material consists of a 2-year-old fresh cadaveric cow cranium. A four-step approach was designed to simulate microneurosurgical dissection along the falx to visualize cingulated gyri, callosomarginal and pericallosal arteries in order to perform callosotomy and access to the lateral ventricle, and finally to the foramen of Monroe. We conclude that the model perfectly simulates standard microneurosurgical steps in interhemispheric-transcallosal approach to the lateral ventricle and to the area of the foramen of Monroe.Öğe Large intradiploic growing skull fracture of the posterior fossa(Springer, 2006) Hamamcioglu, MK; Hicdonmez, T; Kilincer, C; Cobanoglu, SGrowing skull fractures (GSFs) are rare complications of head injury and mostly occur in infancy and early childhood. Location in the posterior fossa and intradiploic development of a GSF is very uncommon. We report a 7-year-old boy with a large, 9x7x4-cm, occipital intradiploic GSF. The lesion developed progressively over a period of 5 years following a documented occipital linear fracture. This case of a GSF developing from a known occipital linear fracture demonstrates that a GSF may reach a considerable size and, although uncommon, intradiploic development and occipital localization of a GSF is possible.Öğe Reversible postictal MRI change mimicking structural lesion(Elsevier, 2003) Hicdonmez, T; Utku, U; Turgut, N; Cobanoglu, S; Birgili, BA reversible change on magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) following generalised seizure mimicking a tumour-like structural lesion is reported in a 15-year-old patient. MRI revealed a left fronto-parietal cortico-subcortical lesion on T2 weighted images. The control MRI after 5 weeks from the onset revealed no pathological finding. The reversible MRI changes may be the result of a local brain swelling, and a defect of cerebral autoregulation during seizure at the site of activity. The transient nature of such neuroradiological findings have to be taken into consideration in the differential diagnosis because of their similar appearance on imaging to intrinsic brain tumours. (C) 2003 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.Öğe Wolf-Hirschhom syndrome with posterior intraorbital coloboma cyst: an unusual case(Elsevier Science Bv, 2004) Tutunculer, F; Acunas, B; Hicdonmez, T; Deviren, A; Pelitli, VWolf-Hirschhorm syndrome (WHS) is associated with partial deletion of short arm of chromosome 4, and characterized by severe growth retardation. Other characteristic features are microcephaly, intellectual handicap, Greek helmet facies and closure deficits such as cleft lip or cleft palate, coloboma of the eye, and cardiac septal defect. We herein present a new case of WHS with bilateral iris colobomata and a left intraorbital large coloboma cyst causing exophthalmos. (C) 2003 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.