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Intracranial Pressure and Brain Monitoring XII

Wai S. Poon ; Matthew T. V. Chan ; Keith Y. C. Goh ; Joseph M. K. Lam ; Stephanie C. P. Ng ; Anthony Marmarou ; Cees J. J. Avezaat ; John D. Pickard ; Marek Czosnyka ; Peter J. A. Hutchinson ; Yoichi Katayama (eds.)

Resumen/Descripción – provisto por la editorial

No disponible.

Palabras clave – provistas por la editorial

Neurosurgery; Intensive / Critical Care Medicine; Neurosciences; Neurology; Anesthesiology

Disponibilidad
Institución detectada Año de publicación Navegá Descargá Solicitá
No detectada 2005 SpringerLink

Información

Tipo de recurso:

libros

ISBN impreso

978-3-211-24336-7

ISBN electrónico

978-3-211-32318-2

Editor responsable

Springer Nature

País de edición

Reino Unido

Fecha de publicación

Información sobre derechos de publicación

© Springer-Verlag/Wien 2005

Tabla de contenidos

Clinical comparison of tympanic membrane displacement with invasive ICP measurements

S. Shimbles; C. Dodd; K. Banister; A. D. Mendelow; I. R. Chambers

- Hydrocephalus | Pp. 197-199

Gravity valves for idiopathic normal-pressure hydrocephalus: a prospective study with 60 patients

U. Meier

- Hydrocephalus | Pp. 201-205

The relationship between CSF circulation and cerebrovascular pressure-reactivity in normal pressure hydrocephalus

Z. Czosnyka; F. van den Boogaard; M. Czosnyka; S. Momjian; L. Gelling; J. D. Pickard

- Hydrocephalus | Pp. 207-211

Evolution of intracranial pressure during the immediate postoperative period after endoscopic third ventriculostomy

D. Santamarta; J. Martin-Vallejo

- Hydrocephalus | Pp. 213-217

Clinical research on monitoring CSFP through lumbar epidural pressure

Z. Liu; Y. Y. Dou; R. Chen; X. Z. Zhang

- Hydrocephalus | Pp. 219-222

Evaluation of three new models of hydrocephalus shunts

Z. H. Czosnyka; M. Czosnyka; H. K. Richards; J. D. Pickard

- Hydrocephalus | Pp. 223-227

The enigma of underdrainage in shunting with hydrostatic valves and possible solutions

C. Sprung; C. Miethke; H. -G. Schlosser; M. Brock

- Hydrocephalus | Pp. 229-235

Guidelines for management of idiopathic normal pressure hydrocephalus: progress to date

A. Marmarou; P. Black; M. Bergsneider; P. Klinge; N. Relkin;

The aim of this project was to develop evidenced based guidelines for the diagnosis and management of idiopathic normal pressure hydrocephalus (iNPH). An advisory panel consisting of the authors assisted by international experts met on several occasions and formulated preliminary guidelines for iNPH managemen. The authors developed evidentiary tables based on available literature from 1966 to the present. Additional meetings to refine the evidentiary tables and incorporate expert opinion when necessary resulted in the development the iNPH guidelines. Evidence based guidelines identifying the value of clinical examination, brain imaging, Tap Test, CSF drainage, ICP monitoring and Surgical Management in diagnosing and treating the iNPH patient were developed. These are the first international evidence based guidelines focused on iNPH. Class I data were scant and guidelines relied mostly on class II and III evidence. It became clear that more prospective randomized studies are needed to resolve some of the controversial issues such as iNPH classification and sensitivity of diagnostic tests for identifying shunt responsive iNPH.

- Hydrocephalus | Pp. 237-240

Three-year outcome of shunted idiopathic NPH patients

G. Aygok; A. Marmarou; H. F. Young

The incidence of idiopathic normal pressure hydrocephalus (iNPH) has increased as a result of improved longevity. This report describes the 3-year outcome of shunted iNPH patients compared to three-month outcome after shunting. Patients (n = 50) (Age 70.4 ± 8.9) admitted to our service were diagnosed and treated according to a fixed protocol for management of iNPH and after shunting were followed at least three times per year in clinic. The outcome of 50 patients was graded according to the level of improvement in symptoms as Excellent/Good, Partial or None in each category of Gait, Incontinence and Dementia. If we lump favorable (excellent, good, partial recovery) vs poor recovery (none), we found from 3 months to 3 years, a moderate decline in gait performance (91% to 75%), a retention of memory improvement (80%-80%) and an improvement in incontinence occurred over time (70%–82.5%).

With proper diagnosis and management of iNPH, shunting of patients is associated with a favorable risk/benefit ratio that is reasonably long lasting.

- Hydrocephalus | Pp. 241-245

Clinical testing of CSF circulation in hydrocephalus

Z. Czosnyka; M. Czosnyka; B. Owler; S. Momjian; M. Kasprowicz; E. A. Schmidt; P. Smielewski; J. D. Pickard

- Hydrocephalus | Pp. 247-251