2018, Number 1
A clinical and historic approach Type I Chiari malformation in adults
Pérez OL, Álvarez AA, Rodríguez RE, Laud RL
Language: Spanish
References: 0
Page: 144-158
PDF size: 89.93 Kb.
ABSTRACT
The existent literature on Type I Chiari Malformation in adults was reviewed, making emphasis in its imaging diagnosis and medico-surgical treatment. Chiari malformation is a few frequent disease. It represents between 1 % and 4 % of all the neurosurgery pathologies. The diagnosis is made up months and even years after the beginning of the symptoms and it is confirmed by cranial magnetic resonance in the 100 % of the cases. The treatment is surgical in symptomatic patients, and it is controversial in the oligosymptomatic ones and in those with casual diagnosis. The surgery should be performed with the support of neurophysiological monitoring that might be determinant in the surgical technique to use. The mortality associated to the surgery is low, ranging from 0 and 0.5 % in most of the series. The most important thing is the choice of the patients for the surgical treatment. The neurological deterioration should not be expected to justify the surgery; when the surgery is carried out on time the results are better and with the minimum of complications.