56 research outputs found

    Grenzen in grijs gebied

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    Om hersenoperaties veilig uit te voeren is niet alleen kennis van de anatomie vereist, de chirurg dient ook geoefend te zijn in microchirurgische technieken welke op diermodellen of kadavers aangeleerd moeten worden. Daarnaast moet de handvaardigheid onderhouden worden door met regelmaat te opereren. Onze afdeling in Erasmus MC beschikt over uitstekende neurochirurgen die gezamenlijk alle benodigde technieken in ruime mate beheersen. Mijn voorganger professor Avezaat heeft bij de totstandkoming hiervan een grote rol gespeeld en de afdeling is hem daarvoor gepaste dank verschuldigd

    Currarino's triad diagnosed in an adult woman.

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    _Purpose_ To report on a female patient diagnosed with Currarino's triad in adulthood. _Case report_ This case presents an adult patient with a medical history of a congenital anal atresia, a partial sacral agenesis, and a surgically treated ectopic anus. After a coincidentally observed presacral mass by MRI, due to unexplained constipation later in adulthood, Currarino's triad was suspected in this patient. This triad consists of anorectal malformation(s), sacrococcygeal defects and a presacral mass of various origin. Further investigation confirmed the mass to be a meningocele, and showed a tethered cord and a syrinx. _Conclusions_ In (young) patients with anorectal malformations, although having no other symptoms, further examination might be required to exclude Currarino's triad. Importance of early diagnosis and multidisciplinary assessment is recommended to establish adequate treatment if needed

    The membrane of Liliequist—a safe haven in the middle of the brain. A narrative review

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    Background: The membrane of Liliequist is one of the best-known inner arachnoid membranes and an essential intraoperative landmark when approaching the interpeduncular cistern but also an obstacle in the growth of lesions in the sellar and parasellar regions. The limits and exact anatomical description of this membrane are still unclear, as it blends into surr

    Personalizing oncolytic virotherapy for glioblastoma: In search of biomarkers for response

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    Oncolytic virus (OV) treatment may offer a new treatment option for the aggressive brain tumor glioblastoma. Clinical trials testing oncolytic viruses in this patient group have shown promising results, with patients achieving impressive long-term clinical responses. However, the number of responders to each OV remains low. This is thought to arise from the large heterogeneity of these tumors, both in terms of molecular make-up and their immune-suppressive microenvironment, leading to variability in responses. An approach that may improve response rates is the personalized utilization of oncolytic viruses against Glioblastoma (GBM), based on specific tumor-or pa-tient-related characteristics. In this review, we discuss potential biomarkers for response to different OVs as well as emerging ex vivo assays that in the future may enable selection of optimal OV for a specific patient and design of stratified clinical OV trials for GBM

    eHealth cognitive rehabilitation for brain tumor patients: results of a randomized controlled trial

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    Background Evidence-based cognitive rehabilitation programs for brain tumor patients are not widely available, despite the high need. We aimed to evaluate the effects of a tablet-based cognitive rehabilitation program on cognitive performance, cognitive complaints, fatigue, and psychological distress in primary brain tumor patients following neurosurgery. Also, attrition, adherence and patient satisfaction with the program were evaluated. Methods Adults with presumed low-grade glioma and meningioma were recruited before surgery. Three months thereafter, participants were allocated to the intervention group or waiting-list control group using minimization. The 10-week eHealth app ReMind, based on the effective face-to-face intervention, consisted of psychoeducation, strategy-training and attention retraining. Performance-based cognitive outcomes and patient-reported outcomes were assessed before surgery and 3, 6 and 12 months thereafter. Mean scores, percentages of cognitively impaired individuals and reliable change indices (RCIs) were compared between groups. Results Sixty-two out of 183 eligible patients were randomized. Of the people who declined, 56% reported that participation would to be too burdensome. All participants found a tablet-app suitable for delivery of cognitive rehabilitation and 90% rated the program as "good" or "excellent". Performance-based cognitive outcomes and patient-reported outcomes did not significantly differ in group means over time nor RCIs between the intervention (final n = 20) and control group (final n = 25). Conclusions Recruitment at this early stage was difficult, resulting in limited statistical power. No significant effects were demonstrated, while adherence and satisfaction with the eHealth program were good. In clinical practice, ReMind may be helpful, if timing would be adapted to patients' needs.Neurolog

    Fast-spiking Parvalbumin Interneurons are Frequently Myelinated in the Cerebral Cortex of Mice and Humans

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    Myelination, the insulating ensheathment of axons by oligodendrocytes, is thought to both optimize signal propagation and provide metabolic support. Despite the well-established physiological importance of myelination to neuronal function, relatively little is known about the myelination of GABAergic interneurons in the cerebral cortex. Here, we report that a large fraction of myelin in mouse cerebral cortex ensheaths GABAergic interneurons, reaching up to 80% in hippocampal subregions. Moreover, we find that a very high proportion of neocortical and hippocampal parvalbumin (PV) interneurons exhibit axonal myelination. Using a combination of intracellular recordings and biocytin labeling of ex vivo human neocortex, we also confirm that axons of fast-spiking PV interneurons are extensively myelinated in the human brain. PV interneuron myelination in both mice and humans exhibits a stereotyped topography with a bias towards proximal axonal segments and relatively short internodes (~27 μm) interspersed with branch points. Interestingly, myelin-deficient Shiverer mice exhibit an increased density and more proximal location of en passant boutons, suggesting that myelination might function in part to regulate synapse formation along PV interneuron axons. Taken together, fast-spiking interneuron myelination is likely to have broad implications for cerebral cortex function in health and disease

    ABT-888 enhances cytotoxic effects of temozolomide independent of MGMT status in serum free cultured glioma cells

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    Background: The current standard of care for Glioblastoma Multiforme (GBM) consists of fractionated focal irradiation with concomitant temozolomide (TMZ) chemotherapy. A promising strategy to increase the efficacy of TMZ is through interference with the DNA damage repair machinery, by poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase protein inhibition(PARPi). The o

    Contemporary frameless intracranial biopsy techniques: Might variation in safety and efficacy be expected?

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    Background: Frameless stereotactic neuronavigation has proven to be a feasible technology to acquire brain biopsies with good accuracy and little morbidity and mortality. New systems are constantly i

    A Systematic Comparison Identifies an ATP-Based Viability Assay as Most Suitable Read-Out for Drug Screening in Glioma Stem-Like Cells

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    Serum-free culture methods for patient-derived primary glioma cultures, selecting for glioma stem-like cells (GSCs), are becoming the gold standard in neurooncology research. These GSCs can be implemented in drug screens to detect patient-specific responses, potentially bridging the translational gap to personalized medicine. Since numerous compounds are available, a rapid and reliable readout for drug efficacies is required. This can be done using approaches that measure viability, confluency, cytotoxicity, or apoptosis. To determine which assay is best suitable for drug screening, 10 different assays were systematically tested on established glioma cell lines and validated on a panel of GSCs. General applicability was assessed using distinct treatment modalities, being temozolomide, radiation, rapamycin, and the oncolytic adenovirus Delta24-RGD. The apoptosis and cytotoxicity assays did not unequivocally detect responses and were excluded from further testing. The NADH- and ATP-based viability assays revealed comparable readout for all treatments; however, the latter had smaller standard deviations and direct readout. Importantly, drugs that interfere with cell metabolism require alternative techniques such as confluency monitoring to accurately measure treatment effects. Taken together, our data suggest that the combination of ATP luminescence assays with confluency monitoring provides the most specific and reproducible readout for drug screening on primary GSCs

    Spinal meningiomas: Treatment outcome and long-term follow-up

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    Background: Spinal intradural tumors can be classified as intradural extramedullary or intramedullary tumors. Spinal meningiomas are among the most frequent intradural, extramedullary tumors (IDEMs), representing 12 % of all meningiomas and 25–45 % of all intradural spinal tumors. Objective: To evaluate postoperative outcome, defined by mortality, tumor recurrence and modified Rankin Scale in patients with spinal meningiomas. Furthermore, to identify factors related to these outcome measures and define possible prognosticators. Methods: A large single center retrospective analysis of 166 consecutive spinal meningioma patients during a 29- year period (1989–2018). Results: Female to male ratio was 5.15 to 1. Of all 166 resected tumors, 159 were WHO grade I and seven were WHO grade II. Histopathologically, the psammomatous type was most common (42.8 %). The thoracic region was the most frequent location (71.1 %), followed by cervical and lumbar locations. A complete resection (Simpson I-III) was achieved in 88.7 %. In 12 cases (7.2 %) recurrences of a spinal meningioma occurred after an interval of 0.70–13.78 years. Postoperative complications consisted of CSF leakage and wound healing problems. Three patients died of direct postoperative complications (1.8 %), nine patients died in follow-up due to unrelated causes. Post-operative complications were related to the overall outcome (p = 0.029). Clinical outcome showed improvement in 117 patients out of 148 (79.1 %) according to modified Rankin Scale; 24 patients remained stable and 7 patients deteriorated. Patients with pre-existing bladder/bowel problems and incomplete resections had higher chance of recurrences. Younger patients also had a higher recurrence rate. Follow-up ranged from 0 to 23 years, median of 0.77 years, most were discontinued after 2 years. Conclusions: The primary treatment of spinal meningiomas remains surgery. Complete resection of spinal meningiomas is achieved in most of the cases, however preserving and improving neurological status has priority over complete tumor resection. Morbidity and mortality is relatively low. Longer follow-up periods are recommended, since recurrences can occur after 10–15 years
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