J Korean Neurosurg Soc.  1998 Jun;27(6):770-774.

Surgical Decompression for Acute Brain Infarction

Affiliations
  • 1Catholic Neuroscience Center, Catholic University, Seoul, Korea.

Abstract

We present 15 patients with progressive neurological deterioration while on medical treatment for massive cerebral or cerebellar edema due to large cerebral or cerebellar infarction. Clinical signs of uncal herniation were present in 10 of these patients. Remaining five patients showed progressive neurological deterioration accompanied with impending herniation. Brain CT confirmed mass effect from cerebral or cerebellar edema in all cases. All 15 patients were treated with decompressive craniectomy, duroplasty and/or ventriculostomy. Nine patients showed good results and six patients had poor results. As compared with poor result group, good result group had high score of Glass Gow Coma Scale(GCS) on admission(12.8 vs. 8.3 on average) and time from worsening to operation is shorter(8.8 vs. 21.3hrs on average). Infarction was all on right side and hearniation sign just before operation appeared infrequently in good result group. These results suggest that decompressive surgery can be effective life saving procedure for massive cerebral edema after large brain infarction, especially in cases with right side lesion, high GCS score on admission, and pertinent timing of operation(before occurrance of irreversible brain stem damage due to herniation).

Keyword

Cerebral and cerebellar infarction; Brain edema; Neurological deterioration; Decompressive surgery

MeSH Terms

Brain Edema
Brain Infarction*
Brain Stem
Brain*
Coma
Decompression, Surgical*
Decompressive Craniectomy
Edema
Glass
Humans
Infarction
Ventriculostomy
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