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Ramos-Fresnedo Andres Domingo Ricardo A. Vivas-Buitrago Tito Lundy Larry Trifiletti Daniel M. Jentoft Mark E. Desai Amit B. Quiñones-Hinojosa Alfredo 《Journal of neuro-oncology》2020,149(3):413-420
Journal of Neuro-Oncology - Intracranial meningiomas rarely present with multiple lesions. To the best of our knowledge, current literature regarding meningiomatosis (MM) is mostly comprised of... 相似文献
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Perez-Vega Carlos Ramos-Fresnedo Andres Tripathi Shashwat Domingo Ricardo A. Ravindran Krishnan Almeida Joao P. Peterson Jennifer Trifiletti Daniel M. Chaichana Kaisorn L. Quinones-Hinojosa Alfredo Samson Susan L. 《Pituitary》2022,25(3):540-549
Pituitary - Transsphenoidal surgery (TSS) is the first-line treatment for patients with Cushing’s Disease (CD). Recurrence rates after a first TSS range between 3 and 22% within... 相似文献
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Andres Ramos-Fresnedo Carlos Perez-Vega Ricardo A. Domingo William P. Cheshire Erik H. Middlebrooks Sanjeet S. Grewal 《Neuromodulation》2022,25(2):211-221
BackgroundMotor cortex stimulation (MCS) was introduced in 1985 and has been tested extensively for different types of peripheral and central neuropathic pain syndromes (eg, central poststroke pain, phantom limb pain, trigeminal neuropathic pain, migraines, etc). The motor cortex can be stimulated through different routes, including subdural, epidural, and transcranial.ObjectivesIn this review, we discuss the current uses, surgical techniques, localization techniques, stimulation parameters, and clinical outcomes of patients who underwent chronic MCS for treatment-resistant pain syndromes.Materials and MethodsA broad literature search was conducted through PubMed to include all articles focusing on MCS for pain relief (keywords: subdural, epidural, repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation, transcranial direct current stimulation, motor cortex stimulation, pain).Literature ReviewEpidural MCS was the most widely used technique and had varying response rates across studies. Long-term efficacy was limited, and pain relief tended to decrease over time. Subdural MCS using similar stimulation parameters demonstrated similar efficacy to epidural stimulation and less invasive methods, such as repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS), which have been shown to provide adequate pain relief. rTMS and certain medications (ketamine and morphine) have been shown to predict the long-term response to epidural MCS. Complications tend to be rare, the most reported being seizures during subdural or epidural stimulation or hardware infection.ConclusionsScientific evidence supports the use of MCS for treatment of refractory neuropathic pain syndromes. Further studies are warranted to elucidate the specific indications and stimulation protocols that are most amenable to the different types of MCS. 相似文献
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