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Query: UMLS:C0017638 (
glioma
)
30,880
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Generalised or partial seizures are a common problem with many supratentorial gliomas. Their underlying pathophysiological mechanisms are poorly understood. To investigate this problem clinical and EEG seizure thresholds were investigated in experimental rodent gliomas using the epileptogenic drug pentylenetetrazole (PTZ). Mixed C6/A15A5 malignant gliomas were grown in adult Wistar rats after unilateral stereotactic implantation of a 50:50 cell mix into the caudoputaminal region. Eleven to 14 days later EEG (raw and spectrally analysed) was recorded bilaterally from the frontal and parietal regions under mixed alpha-chloralose and urethane
anaesthesia
. Baseline EEG (15 minutes), EEG during and after (30 minutes) PTZ infusion (100 microliters/min) and the time to appearance of seizure manifestations after starting PTZ were recorded. Fourteen animals were studied (5 normal, 5 with tumours, 4 sham implants) and mean BP, PaCO2, PaO2 and temperature were similar in the three groups. Baseline raw EEG showed predominate slow wave activity with lower amplitude and less spontaneous activity overlying tumours. Following PTZ infusion a sequence of vibrissal twitching (following a mean of 14.5 mg/kg PTZ in control and sham animals); jaw/nasal twitches (17.5 mg/kg); fore and hind limb jerking (46 mg/kg); myoclonic jerking (47 mg/kg); and status (77.5 mg/kg) was observed. The seizure thresholds for all PTZ induced seizure phenomena were, except for status epilepticus, highest in the tumour bearing animals. The time to 70% seizure activity on the EEG was also significantly longer in the tumour bearing animals. Spectral analysis of the EEG, although showing increased alpha and theta activity after PTZ infusion, did not discriminate between the three experimental groups either before or after PTZ activation. These studies have confirmed that experimental gliomas alter baseline EEG and both the EEG and behavioural response to PTZ. The reasons for the raised seizure threshold in the
glioma
bearing animals and the relevance of this experimental paradigm to human tumour associated epilepsy are discussed.
...
PMID:The effects of malignant glioma on the EEG and seizure thresholds: an experimental study. 873 86
Chemotherapy delivery for the treatment of malignant brain tumors is markedly enhanced when given in conjunction with osmotic opening of the blood-brain barrier. Osmotic opening or disruption of the blood-brain barrier is achieved while the patient is under general
anesthesia
, by the infusion of mannitol into the internal carotid or vertebral artery circulation. The mannitol infusion is followed by administration of intraarterial chemotherapy. A National Blood-Brain Barrier Program now exists and includes six universities. Within the National Program over 4200 blood-brain barrier disruption procedures have been performed in over 400 patients. Patients with primary central nervous system (CNS) lymphoma,
glioma
, primitive neuroectodermal tumor (PNET), germ cell and metastatic cancer are eligible for treatment. Results in patients with primary CNS lymphoma, recently reported in the Cancer Journal, include the first example of a durable response in a primary brain tumor without loss of cognitive function and without use of radiotherapy. Results with PNET and germ cell tumors are also very encouraging. Advanced practice nurses coordinate the care of blood-brain barrier disruption patients. Care includes patients selection, education, close neurological observation, maintenance of fluid and electrolyte balance and managing effects of high-dose chemotherapy. Both acute and long-term medical and psychological follow-up are an essential component of the program, as well as patient and family support.
...
PMID:Blood-brain barrier disruption for the treatment of malignant brain tumors: The National Program. 964 16
Indications of surgical treatment for lesions in functional cerebral areas depend on the ratio between the definitive neurological deficit and the beneficial effect of resection. Detection of eloquent cortex is difficult because of important individual variability. Peroperative direct cortical and subcortical electrical stimulations (DCS) provide the most precise and reliable method currently available allowing identification and preservation of neurons essential for motricity, sensitivity++ and language. We report our preliminary experience with DCS in surgery of intracerebral infiltrative tumors with a consecutive series of 15 patients operated from November 96 through September 97 in our institution. Presenting symptoms in the 15 patients (8 males, 7 females, mean age 43 years) were seizures in 11 cases (73%) and neurological deficit in 4 cases (27%). Clinical examination was normal in 11 patients and revealed hemiparesia in 4. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) with three-dimensional reconstruction showed a precentral tumor in 10 cases, central lesion in one patient, postcentral lesion in two cases, right insular tumor (non-dominant hemisphere) in one case. All patients underwent surgical resection using DCS with detection in 13 cases of motor cortex and subcortical pathways under genera
anesthesia
, in one case of somatosensory area under local
anesthesia
, and in one case of language areas also under local
anesthesia
. The tumor was recurrent in two patients had been operated earlier but without DCS. Resection, verified by postoperative MRI, was total in 12 cases (80%) and estimated at 80% in 3 patients. Histological examination revealed an infiltrative
glioma
in 12 cases (8 low grade astrocytomas, 3 low grade oligodendrogliomas, and one anaplastic oligodendroglioma), and metastases in 3 cases. Eight patients had no postoperative deficit, while the other 7 patients were impaired, with, in all cases except one, complete recovery in 15 days to 2 months. Direct cortical and subcortical electrical stimulations offer a reliable, precise and safe method, allowing functional mapping especially useful in case of infiltrative cerebral tumors in eloquent areas. This technique allows improvement in the quality of tumoral resection and concurrently a minimization of the risk of definitive postoperative neurological deficit.
...
PMID:[Preoperative direct cortical and sub-cortical electric stimulation during cerebral surgery in functional areas]. 1048 45
Patients with malignant
glioma
undergo a combined treatment with surgical resection, radiotherapy, and chemotherapy. Although those treatments usually show some restraining effects on the tumor, a relapse occurs in most of the patients within a few years. We have investigated the feasibility and safety of intra-arterial chemotherapy for malignant brain tumors by enhancing vascular permeability using intra-arterial bradykinin infusion. In 2001, The Committee of Ethics in Kyushu University approved our clinical trial of the bradykinin-enhancing chemotherapy for recurrent malignant gliomas. We here report the first case of our clinical trial. A 31-year-old man, who had undergone surgical resection followed by chemotherapy and irradiation for malignant progression of the left frontal astrocytoma over a period of 2 years, had a relapse of the tumor in the bilateral frontal lobes. After obtaining informed consent, bradykinin and carboplatin were infused through a microcatheter at the left A1 portion under general
anesthesia
. By dose escalation of bradykinin, the enhanced lesion in the bilateral frontal lobes diminished on magnetic resonance imaging after 3 trials with 3-week intervals, regardless of new lesions outside of the treated area. No neurological or physiological complication including myelosuppression was noted. Bradykinin-enhancing chemotherapy appeared to be effective and safe for malignant
glioma
. Because it was able to increase drug delivery to the tumor, it was possible to reduce the size of the dose of chemotherapeutic agent, which resulted in minimum complication.
...
PMID:[Clinical trial of bradykinin-enhancing chemotherapy for a recurrent malignant glioma: a case report]. 1175 19
Although the occurrence of the supplementary motor area (SMA) syndrome has been extensively reported following mesial lobe surgery, to our knowledge the time course of disease onset was never accurately documented. We describe a patient without deficit, despite harboring a
glioma
invading the left SMA. This patient was operated under local
anesthesia
, to perform intraoperative online sensorimotor and language mapping using electrical stimulations throughout the resection. No deficit was noted at the end of the tumor and SMA removal. The patient was maintained awake to perform an immediate control MRI. Aphasia and right hemiplegia occurred 30 min after the SMA resection. Total recovery was observed within 2 months. This work shows that the SMA syndrome may not occur immediately after SMA resection. We suggest that the transient compensation of the SMA function is likely due to residual activity of an oscillatory loop and/or short-term plasticity (rapid unmasking of parallel networks), with final recovery occurring due to long-term plasticity (neosynaptogenesis).
...
PMID:Delayed onset of the supplementary motor area syndrome after surgical resection of the mesial frontal lobe: a time course study using intraoperative mapping in an awake patient. 1200 69
Measurement of oxygen pressure (pO2) in tumor tissue is important, because pO2 is a major factor for radiosensitivity in malignant
glioma
treatment. We attempted to elucidate the changes in pO2 level in glioblastoma tissue of patients under various conditions. Eighteen patients with newly diagnosed glioblastoma were recruited to this study. Disposable Clark-type electrodes were inserted using CT guided stereotactic surgery under local
anesthesia
and left in the intra- and peritumoral regions. pO2 was measured in patients under conditions of being awake and asleep, inhaling 100% O2, being administered osmotic diuretics and following hyperbaric oxygen exposure (HBO). Peritumoral tissue had a significantly higher pO2 value in both awake and sleeping patients. O2 inhalation could not significantly increase the pO2 level, whereas administration of osmotic diuretics induced an increase in pO2 levels in peritumoral tissue alone. The pO2 levels were significantly increased in both regions after HBO, and a high pO2 level was maintained until 15 min after HBO in both regions. It is possible that the pO2 level in peritumoral tissue is affected by intracranial pressure, whereas that in the intratumoral tissue is usually low. HBO was the optimal procedure for oxygenation, but its benefit was reduced over time.
...
PMID:Change of oxygen pressure in glioblastoma tissue under various conditions. 1216 Jan 40
Stereotactic guided laser-induced interstitial thermotherapy (SLITT) is a minimal invasive method to produce thermonecrosis in cerebral tumour tissue. Clinical data are sparse due to its limited application until now and the value of this approach for tumour control and survival time remain to be defined. Twenty-four patients (7 low-grade gliomas, 11 anaplastic gliomas, 6 glioblastomas) with brain tumours, most recurrences, were treated with SLITT, in total 30 laser procedures were performed. Under local
anaesthesia
a 600 micro m laser-fiber was inserted by the stereotactic-guided technique. In open low-field MR the denaturation of the tumour by a Nd-YAG-laser (1064 nm) was monitored using T 1 -weighted 3-D turbo FLASH sequences. The ablation procedure had to be stopped twice because of neurological deficit, one major infection occurred. In two cases neurological improvement was observed. Mean survival times for low grade astrocytomas, anaplastic gliomas and glioblastomas were 144 months, 39 months, 17 months, respectively. Mean survival times after SLITT were 34 months, 30 months and 9 months, respectively. Mean times to progression after SLITT for the 3 histological subgroups were 16 months, 10 months and 4 months, respectively. Five patients with low grade astrocytoma and a KI greater or equal 70 maintained a high quality functional status for 11, 20, 21, 33 and 43 months. In anaplastic tumours patients maintained a KI of 70 for a median time of 15 months and for those with glioblastoma the respective high quality duration was 7.5 months after SLITT. SLITT for selected patients with
glioma
could have a clinical value in a multimodality treatment schedule maintaining quality of live. Due to the minimal invasive technique, the method is a therapy of choice and may be favoured to reoperation. Major indications of this treatment are small tumours, in eloquent regions and deep seated, as well as in older patients or patients in poor functional status.
...
PMID:Stereotactic guided laser-induced interstitial thermotherapy (SLITT) in gliomas with intraoperative morphologic monitoring in an open MR: clinical expierence. 1249 54
Although a cortical network involving Broca's area and the supramarginal gyrus (SMG) was widely studied using neurofunctional imaging, the functional connectivity underlying this so-called articulatory loop remains poorly documented. We describe a patient operated on for a
glioma
invading the left parietal operculum, using intraoperative electrical functional mapping under local
anesthesia
. Following the identification of cortical language sites within Broca's area and SMG, the subcortical pathways connecting these regions were detected and preserved during the resection. Postoperatively, the patient presented a slight dysarthria, then recovered. This is the first report of direct tracking of the subcortical connectivity underlying the fronto-parietal articulatory loop, allowing to better understand the pathophysiology of this network and the consequences of its damage.
...
PMID:The articulatory loop: study of the subcortical connectivity by electrostimulation. 1456 39
Although the role of the premotor cortex (PMC) was widely studied in motor function, very few data are currently available about the participation of this structure in language. We report a series of 25 right-handed patients harboring a low-grade
glioma
near or within the left dominant PMC, operated on under local
anesthesia
with intraoperative real-time sensorimotor and language mappings using electrical stimulations all along the resection. Language tasks consisted of counting and picture naming (preceded by the reading of a short sentence). Stimulations of the left PMC induced transient speech disturbances in all patients, with disruption of both counting and reading/naming during stimulation of the ventral PMC--due to elicitation of an anarthria--while generating an anomia during stimulation of the dorsal PMC. Moreover, corresponding subcortical pathways generated the same language disorders as at the cortical level when stimulated. Eloquent structures were systematically preserved, allowing the avoidance of definitive postoperative deficit. These findings suggest first that the left dominant PMC seems to play a major role in language and second that this structure could have a well-ordered functional organization, namely with the ventral PMC, which might be involved in planification of articulation, and the dorsal PMC, which might be involved in the naming network.
...
PMID:The role of dominant premotor cortex in language: a study using intraoperative functional mapping in awake patients. 1468 96
Despite the risk of postoperative visual field defect following surgery within the temporo-parieto-occipital region, visual mapping has rarely been described, in particular at the subcortical level. In this report, we successfully performed a subcortical mapping of the visual pathways using intra-operative electrical stimulations (IES), during surgery under local
anesthesia
for a low-grade
glioma
invading the whole temporal lobe and the temporo-occipital junction. The optic radiations then constituted the posterior and deep functional boundary of the resection, avoiding the occurrence of a post-operative hemianopsia, in spite of an asymptomatic quadrantanopsia. This preliminary experience illustrates the possibility to use intra-operative direct electrical stimulation during surgery of lesions involving the posterior afferent visual system, in order to identify and then preserve the visual pathways, as previously reported for sensorimotor and language subcortical fibers.
...
PMID:Intra-operative mapping of the subcortical visual pathways using direct electrical stimulations. 1501 49
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