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1/73. Transnasal endoscopic repair of congenital defects of the skull base in children.

    OBJECTIVE: To examine imaging findings and methods of endoscopic treatment of congenital skull base defects in children. DESIGN: Retrospective study and case series. SETTING: Academic tertiary care center. patients: Four patients (aged 12 and 14 months and 8 and 13 years) were included from 1995 to 1997. Three presented with a nasal glioma, which was recurrent in 1 case. The fourth patient presented with bacterial meningitis due to a spontaneous cerebrospinal fluid leak. Computed tomography and magnetic resonance imaging were used to locate the defect of the skull base. INTERVENTION: Transnasal endoscopic resection of the glioma or the meningocele, with immediate repair of the skull base defects using free mucosal flaps and/or pediculized mucosal flaps and/or conchal cartilage together with fibrin glue and nasal packing during a 3-week period. RESULTS: None of the 4 patients has experienced recurrent cerebrospinal fluid leaks or postoperative meningitis. CONCLUSIONS: The transnasal endoscopic repair of congenital meningoceles is a reliable technique in select pediatric patients. Computed tomography and magnetic resonance imaging provide information that can be used to help the surgical procedure.
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ranking = 1
keywords = meningitis
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2/73. CSF rhinorrhoea from unusual site : report of two cases.

    CSF rhinorrhoea is associated with high morbidity and mortality. Bone and dural defects may result from trauma or enlarging 'pitholes' or breach in lateral recess of sphenoid sinus. Unless surgically corrected, they tend to cause meningitis and rhinorrhoea. Unusually delayed rhinorrhoea is a diagnostic problem.
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ranking = 0.5
keywords = meningitis
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3/73. CSF rhinorrhoea following treatment with dopamine agonists for massive invasive prolactinomas.

    OBJECTIVE: The management of CSF rhinorrhoea following dopamine agonist (DA) treatment for invasive prolactinomas is difficult and there is no clear consensus for its treatment. Our objective was therefore to investigate the different treatments for this condition. DESIGN AND patients: We examined the case notes of five patients with invasive prolactinomas and CSF rhinorrhoea following DA treatment. The different ways in which this complication had been managed is detailed along with a review of the literature. RESULTS: Five patients aged 24-67 years (3 male) with massive invasive prolactinomas (serum prolactin 95000-500000 mU/l) eroding the skull base were treated with dopamine agonists (3 bromocriptine, 1 cabergoline and 1 both). CSF rhinorrhoea developed in all patients between 1 week and 4 months after commencing dopamine agonist treatment. In two patients (cases 1 and 4), CSF rhinorrhoea ceased within a few days of stopping bromocriptine but restarted when treatment was resumed. One of these (case 4), a 67-year-old woman had no further treatment and CSF leakage stopped completely. She died of unrelated medical problems 3 years later. In one patient staphylococcus aureus meningitis and pneumocephalus developed as a complication of CSF rhinorrhoea. Three patients had endoscopic nasal surgery to repair the fistula using muscle grafts, and to decompress the pituitary tumour, with success in two. One patient had intracranial surgery and dural repair, which was successful in sealing the leak. CONCLUSIONS: We suggest that surgery as soon as is feasible is the treatment of choice for the repair of a CSF leak following dopamine agonist treatment. An additional strategy is the withdrawal of dopamine agonist to allow tumour re-growth to stop the leak.
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ranking = 0.5
keywords = meningitis
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4/73. Intrasphenoidal encephalocele and spontaneous CSF rhinorrhoea.

    Intrasphenoidal encephalocele is a rare clinical entity. In the international literature only 16 cases have been reported up today, with female predominance. Clinically they manifest at middle and advanced ages (40-67 years), when spontaneous CSF rhinorrhoea or recurrent meningitis occurs. We present our case, a 46 years old female, who had CSF rhinorrhoea from the right vestibule for 10 months. The diagnosis was based on the history and the high-resolution brain and skull base CT-scanning in conjunction with opaque fluid injection in the subarachnoidal space through a lumbar puncture. She was successfully treated with an operation, through an endonasal trans-ethmoid microendoscopic approach, using the Draf and Stammberger technique. We discuss the pathogenesis of the intrasphenoidal encephalocele, the existence of small occult defects in the skull base, which cause, at the middle and advanced ages, CSF fistula with spontaneous CSF rhinorrhoea and/or recurrent meningitis. Finally we emphasize the advantages of the endonasal surgical approach for the treatment of this condition.
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ranking = 1
keywords = meningitis
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5/73. Delayed cerebrospinal fluid rhinorrhea seven months after transsphenoidal surgery for pituitary adenoma--case report.

    A 51-year-old female had undergone transsphenoidal surgery for pituitary adenoma producing growth hormone. Cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) leakage occurred during surgery. The sella turcica and sphenoid sinus were packed with abdominal fat and fibrin glue, buttressing the closure with a fragment of sphenoid bone. No CSF rhinorrhea occurred postoperatively. Severe meningitis developed 7 months later. CSF rhinorrhea occurred 10 days after readmission. Exploration through the transsphenoidal approach identified a small hole at the floor of the sella and CSF leaking into the sphenoid sinus through the hole. The CSF leakage stopped after the second surgery. Delayed CSF rhinorrhea without bromocriptine administration is very rare. The cause of delayed CSF rhinorrhea remains unclear. CSF rhinorrhea should be suspected if meningitis develops even months after transsphenoidal surgery.
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ranking = 1
keywords = meningitis
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6/73. Subdural and intraventricular traumatic tension pneumocephalus: case report.

    Simple pneumocephalus most frequently arises as a complication of a head injury in which a compound basal skull fracture with tearing of the meninges allows entry of air into the cranial cavity. It can also follow a neurosurgical operation. Tension traumatic pneumocephalus with intraventricular extension is an extremely rare, potentially lethal condition that requires prompt diagnosis and treatment. We report the case of subdural and intraventricular accidental tension pneumocephalus occurring in a 26-year-old man as a result of skull fracture. This case is combined with rhinorrhea and meningitis that suggest some difficulties to treat. The operative procedure associated with medical treatment was performed and a good result was obtained.
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ranking = 0.5
keywords = meningitis
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7/73. Subtotal petrosectomy in the treatment of cerebrospinal fluid fistulae of the lateral skull base.

    Cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) fistulae almost invariably lead to meningitis, even in the absence of other clinically obvious sequelae of the fistula such as a CSF fluid leak. The only effective means of reducing the risk of meningitis is surgical closure of the fistula. If surgery is to be recommended to patients with CSF fistulae even if they are currently asymptomatic, the morbidity of the procedure must be a principal determinant of the chosen technique. Recovery after the extracranial approach to a CSF fistula is much more rapid than after an intracranial procedure. The extracranial route is also free of the long-term risk of epilepsy which accompanies a craniotomy. The principal disadvantage of the lateral extracranial approach, failure of treatment, has been largely eliminated following studies into the obliteration of simple bony cavities using free adipose grafts. This paper describes our use of the extracranial approach to closure of CSF fistulae of the lateral skull base.
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ranking = 1
keywords = meningitis
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8/73. bacillus cereus meningitis complicating cerebrospinal fluid fistula repair and spinal drainage.

    Non-anthrax Bacillus species are rare, but serious causes of bacterial meningitis in those either immunocompromised or treated with CSF diversion. Although resistant to first-line antibiotics, they usually respond to chloramphenicol. We report a case of fulminant bacillus cereus meningitis that complicated lumbar spinal drainage which proved resistant to all first-line antibiotics including chloramphenicol.
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ranking = 3
keywords = meningitis
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9/73. Recurrent pyogenic meningitis: an unusual presentation in a case of neurofibromatosis-1.

    We report a case of recurrent pyogenic meningitis with cerebrospinal fluid rhinorrhoea in a patient with neurofibromatosis-1, which has not been reported previously.
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ranking = 2.5
keywords = meningitis
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10/73. recurrence of pneumococcal meningitis due to primary spontaneous cerebrospinal fluid fistulas.

    The authors report a case of pneumococcal meningitis which recurred 3 times in a Taiwanese boy due to spontaneous cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) fistulas. The first time occurred at the age of 2 years, and the second episode presented as meningoencephalomyelitis at the age of 6 years 10 months. Studies including serum levels of immunoglobulin and complements, brain magnetic resonance imaging, and coronal cranial computed tomography (CT) were negative for a specific etiology. The third episode of meningitis developed 2 months after the second episode. Repeated immunological studies and high-resolution CT of paranasal sinuses and temporal bones were negative. technetium-99m diethylenetriamine pentaacetic acid (Tc-99m-DTPA) radionuclide cisternography revealed abnormal retention of radioactivity over the right mastoid area. neurosurgery was undertaken to seal the dural tear and pack the petrosal fissure. Two years after surgery, he has had no further CSF leak age or meningitis. Tracing back the history, there was no head injury, cranial surgery, brain tumor, or hydrocephalus, which might have created CSF fistulas. Primary spontaneous CSF fistulas constitute the most reasonable diagnosis. In cases of recurrent bacterial meningitis, underlying anatomic defects should be carefully evaluated if there is no immune defect.
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ranking = 4
keywords = meningitis
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