htmlOn October 27, a patient who underwent microscopic intracranial space-occupying lesions and epilepsy cortical thermal burning surgery in the Department of Neurosurgery of Panjiang General Hospital was discharged from the hospital. The patient recovered well after the operation and had no dysfunctions such as hemiplegia and aphasia .
htmlOn September 29, 68-year-old patient Zhou was treated in the outer hospital for 2 hours due to sudden right limb fatigue and convulsions. He was later taken to the emergency department of Panjiang General Hospital by ambulance for treatment. The patient vomited on the way to the clinic, and after going to the emergency department of Panjiang General Hospital, the symptoms of convulsions occurred again. CT showed "left parietal lobe space-occupying lesions". After consultation in the neurosurgery, he was admitted to the hospital for treatment with "intracranial space-occupying lesions with tumor stroke". The patient was in critical condition. During the escort to the ward, medical staff was still in the epilepsy seizure state. After emergency rescue by the department, the patient's epilepsy status gradually relieved.
preoperative lesion location and range
After examination, it was diagnosed as "left parietal space-occupying lesions: considering meningioma possible, secondary epilepsy, etc.". The doctor communicated with the patients and their families many times. After sufficient surgical risk assessment and perioperative preparation, the neurosurgery team completed "microscopic intracranial space-occupying lesions resection and epilepsy cortical thermal burning" for Zhou under general anesthesia , and successfully removed the tumor with a volume of 5.5cmx4cmx2cm. The tumor was completely removed after surgery, and the pathological report indicated meningioma (WHO grade l).
Before and after surgery, the effect of lesion resection is satisfactory
The head of the Department of Neurosurgery of Panjiang General Hospital said that Zhou's intracranial tumor grew into the brain tissue. If the surgery was not performed, his intracranial tumor would continue to grow, which would cause more serious harm to his body. Common clinical manifestations of meningioma include headache, dizziness, nausea and vomiting, epilepsy, decreased vision, hearing, and smell, unstable walking, poor language, mental abnormalities, numbness of limbs, weakness, etc. When the above symptoms occur, you should go to a regular hospital in time and undergo head CT or magnetic resonance examinations if necessary, so that early detection, early surgery, and early recovery can be achieved.
Correspondent: Xu Baoping
Editor: Xie Mengrong
First trial: Li Jiafeng
Second trial: Tian Weijuan
Third trial: Liu Hongxia
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