Perihematomal edema after minimally invasive surgery: a matter of concern to neurosurgeons

被引:0
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作者
Pan Lei
Zhiyang Li
Hangyu Wei
Ping Song
Lun Gao
Long Zhou
Li Cheng
Qiuwei Hua
Wenju Wang
Qiang Cai
机构
[1] Renmin Hospital of Wuhan University,Department of Neurosurgery
[2] Renmin Hospital of Wuhan University,Department of Critical Care Medicine
[3] Qianjiang Central Hospital,Department of Neurosurgery
来源
Neurosurgical Review | / 46卷
关键词
Spontaneous intracerebral hemorrhage; Brain edema; Minimally invasive surgery; 3D Slicer;
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学科分类号
摘要
The purpose of this study is to explore the evolution of brain edema after minimally invasive surgery in deep spontaneous cerebral hemorrhage (DSICH) treatment and to analyze the differences in edema after different surgical methods. The clinical data of 105 patients with DSICH treated at Renmin Hospital of Wuhan University from January 2020 to June 2022 were analyzed retrospectively. Among them, 54 patients were treated with minimally invasive puncture and drainage surgery (MIPDS group), and 51 were treated with neuroendoscopic surgery (NES group). Continuous computed tomography images of patients in the hospital and 3D Slicer software were used to quantitatively calculate the edematous area to explore the changes in perihematomal edema volume in the two groups after the operation. The peak volume of postoperative edema (37.36±10.51 mL) in the MIPDS group was more extensive than that in the NES group, and its net increase in edema volume was 16.86±10.01 mL more than that in the NES group. The relative edema index (0.86±0.26) was lower in the NES group than in the MIPDS group (P < 0.05). The peak of postoperative edema in the MIPDS group was at 6–8 days after the operation, and that in the NES group was most often at 3–5 days after the operation. There are differences in perihematomal edema of DSICH treated by different minimally invasive methods. Compared with the MIPDS group, the NES group showed earlier peak of cerebral edema and lower degree of cerebral edema. The absolute regression volume of edema in the MIDPs group was greater than that in the NEs group, but there was no difference in the regression rate of edema between the two groups.
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