Carlos Alexandre Martins Zicarelli
Santa Paula Hospital
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Journal of Clinical Neuroscience | 2009
Adriana Tahara; Pedro Santana; Marcos Vinicius Calfat Maldaun; Alexandros Theodoros Panagopoulos; Arnaldo Neves Da Silva; Carlos Alexandre Martins Zicarelli; Paulo Henrique Aguiar
Petroclival meningiomas are technically challenging lesions. They have a tendency to grow slowly, involve cranial nerves and compress the brainstem and basilar artery, pushing them to the opposite side. Their natural history is marked by clinical deterioration and fatal outcome. They were once considered inoperable lesions; decades ago, mortality rates were higher than 50%. The authors describe 15 petroclival meningiomas treated surgically between 1995 and 2007. The main approaches used were combined anterior petrosectomy and retrosigmoid (3 cases), retrosigmoid (8 cases), and pre-sigmoid and subtemporal (4 cases). The mortality rate was 13.5% due to surgical bed hematoma and brain ischemia. The post-operative complications were hydrocephalus in 2 cases, cerebrospinal fluid leak in 2 cases and infection of surgical flap in one case. Limiting factors for surgical removal are tumor consistency, encasement of brainstem perforators and pre-operative clinical status.
Journal of Clinical Neuroscience | 2009
Paulo Henrique Aguiar; Adriana Tahara; Antonio Nogueira de Almeida; Renata Simm; Arnaldo Neves Da Silva; Marcos Vinicius Calfatt Maldaun; Alexandros Theodoros Panagopoulos; Carlos Alexandre Martins Zicarelli; Pedro Gabriel Silva
Olfactory groove meningiomas (OGM) account for 4.5% of all intracranial meningiomas. We report 21 patients with OGMs. Tumors were operated on using three surgical approaches: bifrontal (7 patients), fronto-pterional (11 patients) and fronto-orbital (3 patients). Total tumor removal (Simpson Grade 1) was achieved in 13 patients and Simpson II in 8 patients. Perioperative mortality was 4.76%. The average size of the OGM was 4.3+/-1.1cm. The overall recurrence rate was 19%. We preferred to use the pterional approach, which provides quick access to the tumor with less brain exposure. It also allows complete drainage of cisternal cerebrospinal fluid, providing a good level of brain relaxation during surgery. However, for long, thin tumors, hemostasis can be difficult using this approach.
Einstein (São Paulo) | 2012
Paulo Henrique Pires Aguiar; Carlos Alexandre Martins Zicarelli; Gustavo Rassier Isolan; Apio Cláudio Martins Antunes; Rogério Aires; Sérgio Murilo Georgeto; Adriana Tahara; Fahd Haddad
OBJECTIVE The authors show their experience with brainstem cavernomas, comparing their data with the ones of a literature review. METHODS From 1998 to 2009, 13 patients harboring brainstem cavernomas underwent surgical resection. All plain films, medical records and images were reviewed in order to sample the most important data regarding epidemiology, clinical picture, radiological findings and surgical outcomes, as well as main complications. RESULTS The mean age was 42.4 years (ranging from 19 to 70). No predominant gender: male-to-female ratio, 6:7. Pontine cases were more frequent. Magnetic resonance imaging was used as the imaging method to diagnose cavernomas in all cases. The mean follow-up was 71.3 months (range of 1 to 138 months). Clinical presentation was a single cranial nerve deficit, VIII paresis, tinnitus and hearing loss (69.2%). All 13 patients underwent resection of the symptomatic brainstem cavernoma. Complete removal was accomplished in 11 patients. Morbidity and mortality were 15.3 and 7.6%, respectively. CONCLUSIONS Cavernomas can be resected safely with optimal surgical approach (feasible entry zone) and microsurgical techniques, and the goal is to remove all lesions with no cranial nerves impairment.
Acta neurochirurgica | 2015
Antônio Santos de Araújo Júnior; Paulo Henrique Pires Aguiar; Mirella Martins Fazzito; Renata F. Simm; Marco Antonio Stefani; Carlos Alexandre Martins Zicarelli; Apio Cláudio Martins Antunes
INTRODUCTION This study was undertaken to determine variables that could predict, in the perioperative period of anterior communicating artery (ACom) aneurysms surgeries, the likelihood of postoperative sequelae and complications, after temporary arterial occlusion (TAO). PATIENTS AND METHODS In a universe of 32 patients submitted to ACom aneurysm repair in the last 7 years, 21 needed TAO intraoperatively, and had their data examined retrospectively. RESULTS Aneurysms larger than 7 mm were more likely to be treated with longer TAO time than small aneurysms, (p < 0.0001). There was no statistical correlation between time of occlusion and outcome. Age, Glasgow Coma Scale at initial evaluation, and Fisher scale at first CT scanning were independent factors of unfavorable outcome (p < 0.001). Meanwhile gender, tobacco addiction, obesity, arterial hypertension, dyslipidemia, location of TAO (A1 or A2), intraoperative rupture (IR) and the aneurysm size were not identified as independent prognostic factors.During follow-up period, two thirds of the patients had a favorable outcome, accomplishing normal daily life activities without major complications. Most patients developed clinical vasospasm (66.6 %), with 19 % of the patients harboring a severe disease. Delayed ischemic neurological deficit was observed in 28.5 %, without any statistical correlation to time of TAO or IR. CONCLUSION TAO during ACom aneurysm repair does not seem to add more morbidities to the procedure, and is not an independent prognostic factor.
Neurosurgery Quarterly | 2010
Paulo Henrique Aguiar; Carlos Alexandre Martins Zicarelli; Rogério Aires; Natally Marques Santiago; Adriana Tahara; Renata Simm; Gustavo Rassier Isolan
Revista Brasileira de Neurologia e Psiquiatria | 2018
Carlos Alexandre Martins Zicarelli; Regina Célia Poli Frederico; Victor Guilherme Batistela Pereira; Francisco Spessatto Pesente; João Paulo Bispo Gonçalves; José Ângelo Favoreto Guarnieri
Revista Brasileira de Neurologia e Psiquiatria | 2015
Carlos Alexandre Martins Zicarelli; Sérgio Murilo Georgeto; Karen Fernandes; Munir Antonio Gariba; Camila Hatanaka Dias; Luiz Roberto Aguiar
J. bras. neurocir | 2013
Paulo Henrique Aguiar; Marco Antonio Stefani; Gustavo Rassier Isolan; Carlos Alexandre Martins Zicarelli; Apio Cláudio Martins Antunes
J. bras. neurocir | 2013
Antônio Santos de Araújo Júnior; Carlos Alexandre Martins Zicarelli; Marco Antoni Stefani; Renata Simm; Mirella Martins Fazzito; Apio Cláudio Martins Antunes; Daniel de Carvalho Kirchhoff; Paulo Henrique Pires Aguiar
J. bras. neurocir | 2013
Carlos Alexandre Martins Zicarelli; Marcos Vinicius Calfat Maldaun; Paulo Henrique Pires Aguiar; Sérgio Murilo Georgeto; Francisco Spessatto Pesente; Milena Sampaio
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Marcos Vinicius Calfat Maldaun
University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center
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