Minim Invasive Neurosurg 1998; 41(2): 74-78
DOI: 10.1055/s-2008-1052020
© Georg Thieme Verlag Stuttgart · New York

Endoscopic Neurosurgery: Report of the First Five Cases Done in Malaysia using the Caemaert-Abdullah Method

A. Farouk, J. Abdullah
  • Neurosurgical Unit, Department of Surgery, Hospital Universiti Sains, Malaysia
Further Information

Publication History

Publication Date:
18 March 2008 (online)

Abstract

The first endoscopic procedure done in Malaysia using the Caemaert-Abdullah method is reported and the followup results showed an excellent neurosurgical outcome. A 16-year-old girl with an aqueduct stenosis was operated on using a free-hand, computer-assisted endoscopic method where a third ventriculostomy was done. This was the first case being carried out in the Hospital Universiti Sains Malaysia. The next two cases were a suprasellar pituitary cyst in an elderly man and a child with an obstructive hydrocephalus who was previously shunted which became infected. Both endoscopic procedures, extirpation of the cyst using a Nd:Yag laser and a third ventriculostomy, repectively, were done under general anaesthesia in the supine position. Follow-up revealed a transient diabetis insipidus in all three cases up to 48 hours after the operation which resolved spontaneously. The fourth case involved an endoscopic removal of retained ventricular catheter after rectal migration of a shunt in an eight-year-old girl with congenital hydrocephalus. The fifth was a free-hand endoscopy with Perforation of multiple brain septae in a tenmonth-old baby with hydrocephalus secondary to meningitis. The final outcomes for all the cases were favourable hence we conclude that endoscopic neurosurgery is a safe procedure and hope that more neurosurgeons will continue to use this method, especially for the management of intraventricular cyst and hydrocephalus and especially in South East Asia.

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