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The role of stereotatic radiosurgery for cerebral neoplasms

Lunsford, L.D.; Kondziolka, Douglas; Flickinger, J.C.; Duma, C.M.; Maitz, A; Bissonette, D.; Wu, A.
ORIGINAL:0007767
ISSN: 0285-7936
CID: 206732

The role of stereotactic radiosurgery in the treatment of glial tumors

Chapter by: Dempsey, P.K.; Kondziolka, Douglas; Lunsford, L.D.; Coffey, R.J.; Flickinger, J.C.
in: Stereotactic Radiosurgery Update by Lunsford, L.D. [Eds]
Pittsburgh, PA : Elsevier, 1992
pp. 407-410
ISBN: 0444016597
CID: 206712

Stereotactic radiosurgery of meningiomas

Chapter by: Kondziolka, Douglas; Lunsford, L.D.; Flickinger, J.C.
in: Stereotactic Radiosurgery Update by Lunsford, L.D. [Eds]
Pittsburgh, PA : Elsevier, 1992
pp. 343-352
ISBN: 0444016597
CID: 206702

Biological effects of stereotactic radiosurgery in the normal primate brainstem

Chapter by: Kondziolka, Douglas; Lunsford, L.D.; Altschuler, E.M.; Martinez, A.J.; Wu, A.; Flickinger, J.C.
in: Stereotactic Radiosurgery Update by Lunsford, L.D. [Eds]
Pittsburgh, PA : Elsevier, 1992
pp. 291-294
ISBN: 0444016597
CID: 206692

Radiosurgery for acoustic neuromas [Meeting Abstract]

Lunsford, L.D.; Linskey, M.; Flickinger, J.C.; Maitz, A.H.; Kondziolka, Douglas
ORIGINAL:0007873
ISSN: 0022-3085
CID: 208372

Assessment of integrated logistic tolerance predictions for radiosurgery with the gamma knife

Chapter by: Flickinger, J.C.; Lunsford, L.D.; Kondziolka, Douglas
in: Radiosurgery : baseline and trends by Steiner, Ladislau [Eds]
New York : Raven Press, 1992
pp. 15-22
ISBN: 9780881678475
CID: 209072

Stereotactic radiosurgery for arteriovenous malformations of the brain

Lunsford, L D; Kondziolka, D; Flickinger, J C; Bissonette, D J; Jungreis, C A; Maitz, A H; Horton, J A; Coffey, R J
Stereotactic radiosurgery successfully obliterates carefully selected arteriovenous malformations (AVM's) of the brain. In an initial 3-year experience using the 201-source cobalt-60 gamma knife at the University of Pittsburgh, 227 patients with AVM's were treated. Symptoms at presentation included prior hemorrhage in 143 patients (63%), headache in 104 (46%), and seizures in 70 (31%). Neurological deficits were present in 102 patients (45%). Prior surgical resection (resulting in subtotal removal) had been performed in 36 patients (16%). In 47 selected patients (21%), embolization procedures were performed in an attempt to reduce the AVM size prior to radiosurgery. The lesions were classified according to the Spetzler grading system: 64 (28%) were Grade VI (inoperable), 22 (10%) were Grade IV, 90 (40%) were Grade III, 43 (19%) were Grade II, and eight (4%) were Grade I. With the aid of computer imaging-integrated isodose plans for single-treatment irradiation, total coverage of the AVM nidus was possible in 216 patients (95%). The location and volume of the AVM were the most important factors for the selection of radiation dose. Magnetic resonance (MR) imaging was performed at 6-month intervals in 161 patients. Seventeen patients who had MR evidence of complete obliteration underwent angiography within 3 months of imaging: in 14 (82%) complete obliteration was confirmation being 4 months (mean 17 months) after radiosurgery. The 2-year obliteration rates according to volume were: all eight (100%) AVM's less than 1 cu cm; 22 (85%) of 26 AVM's of 1 to 4 cu cm; and seven (58%) of 12 AVM's greater than 4 cu cm. Magnetic resonance imaging revealed postirradiation changes in 38 (24%) of 161 patients at a mean interval of 10.2 months after radiosurgery; only 10 (26%) of those 38 patients were symptomatic. In the entire series, two patients developed permanent new neurological deficits believed to be treatment-related. Two patients died of repeat hemorrhage at 6 and 23 months after treatment during the latency interval prior to obliteration. Stereotactic radiosurgery is an important method to obliterate AVM's, especially those previously considered inoperable. Success and complication risks are related to the AVM location and the volume treated
PMID: 1885968
ISSN: 0022-3085
CID: 146419

The case for conservative management of venous angiomas

Kondziolka, D; Dempsey, P K; Lunsford, L D
Venous angiomas (developmental venous anomalies) are vascular malformations increasingly recognized in general neurosurgical or neurological practice. They are associated with intracranial hemorrhage, seizures, or progressive neurological deficits or found as incidental findings in patients who present with headaches or have neuroimaging studies for investigation of unrelated neurological disorders. Since venous angiomas drain normal cerebral tissue within a functionally normal arterial territory, resection can lead to venous infarction. This report studies 27 patients with venous angiomas, all of whom had conservative treatment. The venous angioma was considered to be responsible for the onset of neurological symptoms in 14 patients (7 with hemorrhage, 3 with hemorrhage and seizures, 2 with seizures, one with an extrapyramidal movement disorder, and one with motor deficit). Thirteen patients had incidental lesions (8 with headache, and 5 with unrelated neurological symptoms). Ten venous angiomas were in the posterior fossa; seven in the cerebellum. Location did not correlate with symptomatic presentation. No patient with hemorrhage required surgical evacuation of the hematoma. No patient died or had significant morbidity during the follow-up interval (mean of 3.7 years). Venous angiomas are low flow, low resistance vascular malformations, many of which are not associated with neurological sequelae. Our series supports the concept that surgical removal or radiosurgical obliteration should not be performed unless a patient has a second life threatening hemorrhage.
PMID: 1913363
ISSN: 0317-1671
CID: 190342

Stereotactic management of colloid cysts: factors predicting success

Kondziolka, D; Lunsford, L D
Stereotactic aspiration is a valuable surgical alternative for colloid cysts when used alone or in conjunction with microsurgical resection. Since 1981, the authors have performed computerized tomography (CT)-guided stereotactic aspiration as the initial procedure in 22 patients with colloid cysts; stereotactic aspiration alone was successful in 11 patients (50%). Of the 11 patients in whom aspiration failed, stereotactic endoscopic resection was attempted in three and was successful in one. Seven patients required a craniotomy and microsurgical removal of the cyst performed via a transcortical approach. The preoperative CT appearance in eight cases of a hypodense or isodense cyst correlated favorably with successful aspiration of the cyst in six patients. A hyperdense appearance on the preoperative CT scan in 14 cases was associated with subtotal aspiration in 13 patients; five required craniotomy for removal. Preoperative magnetic resonance (MR) imaging in eight patients provided excellent anatomical definition of the cyst and its relationship to other structures of the third ventricle, but it was not possible to correlate successful aspiration with cyst appearance on MR images with short or long relaxation time sequences. The authors' 9-year experience suggests that preoperative CT studies accurately determine size, predict viscosity, and help to define a group of colloid cyst patients for whom stereotactic cyst aspiration will likely be successful. Unsuccessful stereotactic aspiration was related to two features: the high viscosity of the intracystic colloid material (nine patients), or deviation of the cyst away from the aspiration needle due to small cyst volume (two patients). Because of its simplicity and low risk, stereotactic surgery can be offered to selected patients as the initial procedure of choice. Craniotomy can be reserved for those whose imaging studies predict failure or for those whose cyst cannot be aspirated.
PMID: 2045917
ISSN: 0022-3085
CID: 190352

The role of radiosurgery in the management of chordoma and chondrosarcoma of the cranial base [Case Report]

Kondziolka, D; Lunsford, L D; Flickinger, J C
Despite conventional multimodality treatment (surgery and fractionated radiation therapy), recurrence and clinical progression of cranial base chordomas and chondrosarcomas are common. The malignant behavior of these tumors is a result of their critical location, locally aggressive nature, and high recurrence rate. To explore the role of radiosurgery in the treatment of these skull base neoplasms, we assessed its use in four patients with chordoma and two with chondrosarcoma. In five of the patients, radiosurgery was used as adjuvant therapy for residual or recurrent tumors after surgical debulking, and in one patient with a chordoma, it was the primary treatment. No patient received fractionated external beam radiotherapy. All tumors were less than 30 mm in diameter and were treated with 20 Gy to the tumor margin. Skull base computed tomography and magnetic resonance images were essential to define the anatomic relationships between tumor and adjacent basal structures. During follow-up (mean, 22 mo; range, 8-36 mo), we found no progression of the treated tumor volume in any patient. Neurological deficits before treatment improved in three patients; the other three patients remained in stable neurological condition. Serial follow-up imaging studies demonstrated that two patients showed reduction in tumor size and four patients had no tumor growth. In one patient, a metastatic parietal lobe chondrosarcoma developed and was treated by microsurgery. Another patient showed tumor progression outside of the radiosurgical treatment volume. Our results attest to the value of stereotactic radiosurgery as an adjuvant or primary treatment for selected patients with chordoma or chondrosarcoma and demonstrate its potential advantages over standard fractionated irradiation. Analysis of the long-term clinical and imaging effects after radiosurgery is warranted.
PMID: 1870686
ISSN: 0148-396x
CID: 190362