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Publications (6)3.58 Total impact

  • Article: Multimodal strategy for managing meningiomas in the elderly.
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    ABSTRACT: The incidence of brain tumors in elderly patients is increasing. It has become possible to treat meningiomas in the elderly by several modalities. We developed a successful multimodal strategy to treat these patients. We registered 35 patients with meningiomas. Symptomatic meningiomas were treated surgically at the time of diagnosis (n=19). Of the 16 asymptomatic meningiomas, 5 were removed at the time of diagnosis. The other asymptomatic meningiomas (n=11) were treated conservatively and when the tumors increased in size, surgical treatment was considered. "Operated" patients with residual or recurrent tumors underwent radiosurgery with a gamma knife. Surgical mortality and morbidity were 4% and 16%, respectively. Of the 25 "operated" patients, 21 (84.0%) had a good Karnofsky scale (> or =80%) at discharge. In all but two of the 11 patients with asymptomatic, conservatively treated meningiomas, the tumors did not increase during the follow-up period. Gamma knife radiosurgery, performed to treat 3 residual and 1 recurrent tumor, resulted in very good tumor control and none of the tumors increased after gamma knife surgery. Meningiomas in elderly patients require a multimodal approach. Our strategy, which includes surgery, radiosurgery, and conservative treatment, resulted in good tumor control and made it possible for patients to pursue their activities of daily life.
    Acta Neurochirurgica 03/2005; 147(2):131-6; discussion 136. · 1.52 Impact Factor
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    Article: Motor area cavernous angioma: case report.
    Surgical Neurology 05/2000; 53(4):337-9. · 1.67 Impact Factor
  • Article: [A case of vertebrobasilar dissection which was associated with progressing stroke and was successfully treated by intravascular surgery in the acute stage].
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    ABSTRACT: A case of vertebrobasilar dissection which deteriorated in the acute stage and was successfully treated by intravascular surgery is described. A 26-year-old male presented with sudden onset of occipitalgia, weakness of the right upper and lower extremities, and speech disturbance. He was transferred to our hospital 3 hours after the onset. On admission, neurological examination showed right hemiparesis including the face and dysarthria. CT of the head showed no definite abnormality and left vertebral angiograms (VAG) revealed only slight wall irregularity of the basilar artery. T2-weighted MR imaging demonstrated an area of high intensity in the left side of the pons. He was treated conservatively under a diagnosis of pontine infarction. On the 8th hospital day, he developed left hemiparesis. T2-weighted MR imaging revealed a new high intensity lesion in the opposite side of the pons. 3D-SPGR images showed double lumen of the left vertebral artery. Angiography showed that the wall irregularity of the basilar artery had become more obvious. These findings strongly suggested a dissection extending from the left vertebral artery to the basilar artery. Progression of the dissection was presumed to have caused the worsening in clinical symptoms, and further progression of the dissection would involve perforators of the basilar artery top and would be fatal. To prevent further progression of the dissection, the left vertebral artery was occluded at the proximal site of the orifice of the dissection with platinum coils after a test occlusion on the same day. Postoperatively, further deterioration of the clinical symptoms ceased. Left VAG on the 33rd postoperative day demonstrated improvement in the wall irregularity of the basilar artery. His clinical symptoms improved markedly and he was ambulatory at discharge and returned to his previous occupation. We emphasize that a progressive vertebrobasilar dissection that causes clinical deterioration in the acute stage can be prevented from progressing further by occlusion at the proximal site of the orifice of the dissection.
    No shinkei geka. Neurological surgery 12/1998; 26(11):1001-5. · 0.13 Impact Factor
  • Article: [A case of mycotic ICA petrous portion aneurysm treated with endovascular surgery].
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    ABSTRACT: A case is reported of mycotic aneurysm at the petrous portion of the internal carotid artery (ICA) treated with an endovascular procedure. A sixty-seven-year-old male who had suffered from chronic otitis media bilaterally for the last five years showed a sudden onset of massive left otorrhagia. Cerebral angiogram at the eighth day of otorrhagia disclosed a big aneurysm at the petrous portion of the left ICA. The aneurysm was round in shape but its wall was irregular. The angiogram also showed that a stenotic finding of the left ICA just at the proximal portion of the aneurysm and the neck of the aneurysm was not broad. Bone window computed tomography showed a destroyed petrous bone around the left ICA. The results of the Matas test and the Allcock test told us that left ICA occlusion should not be selected as a treatment. We decided that endovascular surgery could be applied as the treatment of this pathology. An endovascular procedure was performed for this pathology one month after the otorrhagia. The aneurysm was successfully embolized using platinum coils beside a part of the neck without occlusion of the parent artery. The patient's postoperative course was not eventful. We concluded that endovascular surgery might be the first choice for the treatment of an ICA petrous portion mycotic aneurysm.
    No shinkei geka. Neurological surgery 04/1996; 24(3):253-7. · 0.13 Impact Factor
  • Article: [A case of multiple cerebral mycotic aneurysms treated with endovascular surgery].
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    ABSTRACT: A case of multiple mycotic cerebral aneurysms successfully treated with endovascular surgery is reported. A nine-year-old boy who has suffered from hypertrophic obstructive cardiomyopathy and active infectious endocarditis in the mitral valve developed sudden consciousness disturbance and convulsion. Computerized tomography revealed subarachnoid hemorrhage with subcortical hematoma in the left parietal lobe. Angiography demonstrated four aneurysms at the distal part of the middle cerebral artery on both sides. Since his physical status had been deteriorating, it was difficult to undergo a usual surgical operation. Therefore, endovascular surgery was performed. The catheter was super-selectively advanced to the parent artery of the left posterior parietal artery aneurysm which seemed to be the hemorrhagic source, and the embolization was performed using platinum coils and liquid embolization material. Angiography after embolization showed that the aneurysms had been successfully occupied by the materials while the aneurysm of the right anterior parietal artery had not responded antibiotic therapy. Therefore the second embolization was carried out to the parent artery of the aneurysm of the right anterior parietal artery one month later. The patient had no neurological deficit after embolization and no aneurysms have been detected by the follow-up angiogram after the second embolization. An endovascular approach might be an alternative useful treatment for cases in which the patient has, deteriorated so much that it is considered difficult to perform open craniotomy under general anesthesia.
    No shinkei geka. Neurological surgery 01/1996; 23(12):1127-32. · 0.13 Impact Factor
  • Article: [A case of dissecting aneurysm associated with mixed connective tissue disease].
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    ABSTRACT: A 41 year-old-female with mixed connective tissue disease (MCTD) associated with dissecting aneurysm (DA) of the right posterior cerebral artery is reported. This case satisfied the diagnostic criteria for MCTD, and cerebral angiography revealed the double-lumen sign and pooling of the contrast medium. Thus it was possible to make a definite diagnosis of both MCTD and DA. Fragility of the arterial wall due to the primary disease, MCTD, appeared to have played a role in the occurrence of dissection and the subarachnoid hemorrhage.
    Nō to shinkei = Brain and nerve 10/1994; 46(9):855-8.