3 research outputs found
The Age of Striatum Determines the Pattern and Extent of Dopaminergic Innervation: a Nigrostriatal Double Graft Study
In animal models of Parkinson's disease, transplanted fetal mesencephalic dopaminergic neurons can innervate the dopamine-depleted host brain, but it is unclear why large portions of the host striatum are left uninnervated. During normal development, the dopaminergic innervation first occurs in the form of a dense patchy pattern in the striatum, followed by a widespread nerve fiber network. Using intraocular double grafts we have investigated dopaminergic growth patterns initiated when ventral mesencephalic grafts innervate striatal targets. The fetal lateral ganglionic eminence was implanted into the anterior eye chamber. After maturation in oculo, fetal ventral mesencephalon was implanted and placed in contact with the first graft. In other animals the two pieces of tissue were implanted simultaneously. Tyrosine hydroxylase (TH) immunohistochemistry revealed a pattern of dense TH-positive patches throughout the total volume of the striatal grafts in simultaneously transplanted cografts, while a widespread, less dense, pattern was found when mature striatal transplants were innervated by fetal dopaminergic grafts. To investigate which type or types of growth patterns that developed after grafting to striatum in situ of an adult host, fetal ventral mesencephalic tissue was implanted into the lateral ventricle adjacent to the dopamine-lesioned striatum. After maturation of the mesencephalic graft, the fetal lateral ganglionic eminence was implanted into the reinnervated part of the host striatum. TH immunohistochemistry revealed a few nerve fibers within the striatal graft and the growth pattern was of the widespread type. In conclusion, grafted dopaminergic neurons preferably innervate mature striatum with a widespread sparse nerve fiber network, while the innervation of the immature striatum occurs in the form of dense patches. Furthermore, when the patchy pattern is formed, the total volume of the striatal target is innervated while growth of the widespread type terminates prior to reaching distal striatal parts. Thus, the growth pattern seems essential to the final volume that is innervated. Once the widespread growth pattern is initiated, the presence of immature striatum does not change the dopaminergic growth pattern. </jats:p
Short-Term Surgical Outcome for Vestibular Schwannoma in Sweden : A Nation-Wide Registry Study
Background: Vestibular Schwannoma (VS) is a benign neoplasm arising from the 8th cranial nerve, with surgery one of the treatment modalities. In a nation-wide registry study, we describe the baseline, treatment characteristics, and short-term outcome in patients surgically treated for VS. Methods: We performed a nationwide study with data from the Swedish Brain Tumor Registry (SBTR) for all adults diagnosed with VS 2009-2015. Patient symptoms, tumor characteristics, and postoperative complications were analyzed. Results: In total 348 patients underwent surgery for VS. Mean age was 50.6 +/- 14.5 years and 165 patients (47.4%) were female. The most common symptom was focal neurological deficit (92.0%), with only 25 (7.2%) being asymptomatic prior to surgery, and 217 (63.6%) had no restriction in activity. Following surgery, 100 (28.7%) patients developed new deficit(s). In terms of postoperative complications; 11 (3.2%) had a hematoma, 35 (10.1%) an infection, 10 (2.9%) a venous thromboembolism, and 23 (6.6%) had a reoperation due to complication. There were no deaths within 30-days after surgery. When grouped according to tumor size (<4 vs. >= 4 cm), those with >= 4 cm tumors were more often males (p = 0.02), had more often ICP related symptoms (p = 0.03) and shorter time from imaging to surgery (p < 0.01). Analysis of the younger (<65 years) vs. elderly (>= 65 years) revealed no difference in outcome except increased 1-year mortality (p = 0.002) in elderly. Conclusion: In this nation-wide registry-study, we benchmark the 30-day complication rate after VS surgery as collected by the SBTR. Further, we present the current neurosurgical outcome data from both VS smaller than 40 mm compared to larger tumors, as well as younger vs. elderly VS patients. Since surgical decision making is a careful consideration of short term risk vs. long term benefit, this information can be useful in clinical decision making
