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Neurosurgery

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Question
Answer
Function of the frontal lobe   Higher intellectual functions; consciousness; responses to outside stimuli, personality, motor coordination for swallowing, salivation, vocalization, chewing, facial expression, hand, arm, torso, pelvis, leg, foot  
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Functions of the parietal lobe   Visual and Touch sensations; coordinates input from different senses for understanding sensory control of the body; Writing, Mathematics and Language; controls body positioning; drawing ability; handling of objects; verbal and non-verbal memory  
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Functions of the L temporal lobe   L: Hearing, understanding, memory of what is seen or heard, recognizing words, personality, behavior, and sexual behavior.  
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Functions of the R temporal lobe   R: hearing, understanding, organizing, and concentrating on what is seen or heard, recognition of musical tones, music sound and non-speech information (drawings), LTM, personality, behavior, and sexual behavior.  
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Functions of the occipital lobe   Seeing: Interpreting what is seen and actual visual images, recognizing an object is moving, reading and writing, finding objects, identifying colors.  
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Functions of the ventricles   CSF fluid production (in the ependymal cells) and cushion for the brain  
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If you think there might be ICP, do a   CT to check  
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Communicating Hydrocephalus   Look up  
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How do you classify the location of the tumor?   Tentorium is the most important divider in the cranium. Supra or infra tentorial tumor. Diff tx, sx  
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Which tumors are likely to cause seizure   supratentorial; pre-op and post-op for these patients include antisesizure meds. Not infratentorial  
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What percentage of brain tumors are diagnosed with seizure?   60%. One of the classic presentations for a supratentorial tumor  
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Tumors involving the ventricles or basal ganglia affect   movement.  
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Pituitary tumors present with   endocrine abnormalities or vision impairment  
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2/3 of intracranial tumors occurring under the age of 15 are   infratentorial masses  
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Unlikely for Brain tumors to migrate outside of CNS b/c of   BBB  
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Which cancers are likely to have mets to the brain?   lung and renal cancer (sooner than breast, colon, and melanoma). In men: Lung, colon, and renal cancers account for 80% of metastatic braintumors, In women: Breast, lung, and melanoma account for 80% of metastatic braintumors  
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Study of choice for brain tumor   MRI  
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CT is good for   hydrocephalus, hemorrhage, fractures. Not great at brain tissue  
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After MRI of brain tumor, next step is   to do a PAN CT of the chest/abdomen/pelvis to rule out other lesions  
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After PAN CT, next step is   Biopsy vs resection. Then radiation and or chemotherapy. Follow up with surveillance scans: MRI, PET, CT  
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How can awake craniotomies be performed?   Brain has no nociceptors  
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When are awake craniotomies performed?   Only when the tumor is in a speech or motor area  
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Worst brain tumor you can get   GBM (Glioblastoma multiforme)  
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Single most effective therapy for many tumors   radiation  
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patient can only be considered for surgery if   they have already failed polypharmacy (2 meds). Also, don't want to remove their dominant lobe and have them come out not talking (use other adjunctive therapies)  
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To reduce risk of damaging language and memory, patients can undergo a   WADA test. determines dominant lobe  
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Right vagus nerve has a branch that supplies the   SA node. So, "pacemaker" sends electrical current every 5 minutes up the Left vagus nerve to help reduce seizures  
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In functional Neurosurgery   patients are pulled off their meds (ex: off all parkinson's meds). Given electrical stimulus until tremor stops. Patient is awake the whole time.  
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Components of functional neurosurgery   An electrode is placed at the target in brain, and is connected to a pacemaker-like device implanted in the chest wall, as shown in this picture.  
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Linear, non-displaced skull fx tx:   leave it alone  
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If depressed skull fx   tx b/c it will damage brain tissue  
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Diastatic fx   linear fracture along suture  
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Tx of Epidural hematoma   Level 1 - needs to go to OR immediately. 90%: arterial bleed - meningeal artery. Lucid interval in 50%  
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Subdural hematoma tx   usually wait. if neurologically intact, you don't have to evacuate the hematoma. If asx, wait for 14 days, and then suck out the blood like a gel.  
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Subarachnoid hemorrhages are often associated with   aneurysms.  
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Classifications used for subarachnoid hemorrhage   Fisher grade: where the blood is located; Hunt Hess tells you the patients symptoms. Higher the number, the poorer the prognosis.  
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Tx approach in an non-actively bleeding subarachnoid hemorrhage:   Triple H therapy. HTN, hypervolemia, and heme dilution (want to perfuse the brain b/c you get vasospasm, and want to prevent stroke)  
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Diffuse axon injury occurs due to   shear strain forces. Grey-white matter twists on itself. Not surgical tx, medical management instead. Poor prognosis  
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Tx of myelomeningocele   Level 1- immediate to OR. Usually caused by folic acid deficiency in the mom's diet.  
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Surgical management of subdural hematoma with a drill burr (?)   do it in the chronic phase  
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Spina Bifida cystica   can actually see the spinal cord outside of the body. Immediately go to OR.  
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Myelomeningocele are associated with   hydrocephalus  
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How to treat hydrocephalus   shunt. 1 shunt if communicating; 2 shunts if noncommunicating  
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Types of shunts   ventriculoperitoneal shunt, ventriculatrial shunt, lumboperitoneal shunt  
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Shunt integrity   tested with shunt flow study. radiotracer injected and followed with CT (?)  
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Sx of Tethered cord   Common signs and symptoms include, scoliosis, gait disturbances, motor and sensory deficits, bladder and bowel dysfunction. TX: remove tether; surgery is Tx of choice  
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If pt has more than one lesion in the brain   chemo/radiation. Need to know pathology, where are these tumors from? If one causes a specific dysfunction, that one can be removed.  
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Lateral tumors involving the Basal Ganglia include   Parkinsonism with cogwheel rigidity and a paucity of movement (akinesia)  
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2/3 of intracranial tumors occurring under the age of 15 are located   below the tentorium (infratentorial masses)  
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Secondary Metastatic Brain tumors are often from the following primary locations:   Lung and renal cancer. These two spread sooner than breast, colon or melanoma.  
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Study of choice to dx a brain tumor   MRI. Then f/u with pan CT of Chest/Abdomen/Pelvis. Biopsy vs resection to confirm pathology  
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In a temporal lobectomy for the treatment of intractable epilepsy, what procedure/test is performed to reduce the risk of damaging language and memory?   the WADA test which temporarily "paralyzes" that half of the brain into which it is injected; patients are shown flashcards, and stop talking or remembering when the sodium amytal (paralysis)sets in, so the area involved w/language or memory is identified  
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Hemorrhage into the CSF space   Subarachnoid hemorrhage. 80% caused by trauma. Non-traumatic causes: aneurysm, AVM, coagulopathy-->coumadin  
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Shape of an epidural hematoma   Biconvex, lenticular, limited by sutures. Lucid interval occurs in 50% of people. 90% of the time it is d/t arterial bleed (meningeal artery)  
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Subdural hematoma   crosses sutures, crescentic shaped. associated with underlying brain injury  
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Synostosis of the ___________ suture produces a triangular shape of the head   metopic (normally begins closure at age 2)  
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Most common craniosynostosis syndrom   Crouzon (skull and facial deformity plus exopthalmos), Apert is second most common (Presents with very highbrachycephalic head and severe syndactyly affecting all limbs.)  
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Most common causes of hydrocephalus (HCP)   post meningitis and post hemorrhage (Other causes include, myelomeningocele, Choroid plexus papiloma, Chiari malformation, Aqueductal stenosis, Tumors)  
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Signs and sx of hydrocephalus   Cranium enlarges > than facial growthIrritability, N, V, poor head controlEnlarged and bulging fontanelleUpward gaze palsyHyperactive reflexesIrregular respirations with apneic spellsBradycardia  
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Normal terminating location of the conus medularis   L1 and L2. Tethered cord is an abdnormally low conus medularis (Common signs and symptoms include, scoliosis, gait disturbances, motor and sensory deficits, bladder and bowel dysfunction)  
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