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Dive into the research topics where Guy Stroobandt is active.

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Featured researches published by Guy Stroobandt.


Acta Neurochirurgica | 1995

Pathogenetic factors in chronic subdural haematoma and causes of recurrence after drainage.

Guy Stroobandt; P. Fransen; Christian Thauvoy; E. Menard

SummaryThe radiological aspect, pathology, treatment and results of 132 subdural haematomas observed in 100 patients, are discussed.The majority of these cases were characterized by a nonhomogenous CT scan picture, resulting from repeated bleeding in a previous subdural haematoma evolving to chronicity, or in a pre-existent subdural hygroma. Taking aspirin may have constituted a predisposing factor in 16% of our patients, whilst coagulation disturbances, including anticoagulant treatment, were observed in another 6%; ethylism was present in 11%. A traumatic origin was ascertained in 80% of the patients.The treatment consisted of burr hole evacuation and drainage in 91.5% of the haematomas, corresponding to 92% of the patients; it was eventually repeated once or twice in some cases. In 6% of the patients, a subduro-peritoneal drainage had to be placed ultimately and in 2%, a membranectomy had to be performed because the haematoma had become nearly completely fibrous. The necessity for repeated evacuation and eventual subduro-peritoneal drainage seems to depend mainly on a slow brain re-expansion in some elderly people, who are actually more frequently referred.Two patients died; one was deeply comatose and another in poor general condition. Morbidity in the 96 remaining patients, 2 being lost to follow-up, was 11%: 5% related to the haematoma or to the causal trauma, and 6% from other concomitant neurological disease. The functional result was satisfactory in 85%.


Acta Neurochirurgica | 1993

Interest and necessity of combined neuroradiological and neurosurgical treatment in some cases of dural arterio-venous fistulae.

P. Fransen; P. Mathurin; P. Pierre; Christian Sindic; Christian Thauvoy; Guy Stroobandt

SummaryThe authors report 3 observations of dural arterio-venous fistula cured by combined neuroradiological and neurosurgical intervention. In the first case, the shunt affected the left lateral sinus. Repeated embolizations failed whilst intracranial hypertension developed, as a consequence of flux in the opposite lateral sinus and in the sagittal sinus. Surgical intervention, consisting in isolation of the transverse sinus, led to complete cure, after a one month delay. In the second case, the shunt was adjacent to the sagittal sinus, right pariet al, and had led to an intracerebral haematoma, by rupture of an arterialized cortical vein. Embolizations alone could not cure the fistula which therefore had to be excised. In the third case, the shunt was located in the falx, at the parieto-occipital junction, and was responsible for arterialization of cerebral veins in the right parieto-occipital region. For this reason, after failure of endovascular treatment, the fistula was coagulated, with subsequent complete cure.These three cases illustrate the different types of drainage of such arterio-venous fistula, and their corresponding neurological symptoms and signs, complications and risks, that required a radical — not only clinical, but also anatomical — cure. This aim was achieved when embolizations were accompanied by direct surgical attack.


Clinical Neurology and Neurosurgery | 1990

Paraganglioma of the cauda equina : report of 2 cases and review of 59 cases from the literature

Christian Raftopoulos; J. Flament-Durand; Jean-Marie Brucher; Guy Stroobandt; Christo Chaskis; Jacques Brotchi

Paragangliomas of the cauda equina are not so rare as said in the literature. Two additional cases are presented with a global analysis of the 59 cases from the literature. The diagnosis of this pathology greatly benefit of the use of immunostainings as the cells are often neuron-specific enolase, neurofilament protein and somatostatin positive so that electron microscopy is thus no longer mandatory for establishing the diagnosis. In addition, we report the first magnetic resonance images of this tumor at this location.


Acta Neurochirurgica | 1987

Treatment by aspiration of brain abscesses.

Guy Stroobandt; Francis Zech; Christian Thauvoy; P. Mathurin; C de Nijs; Claude Gilliard

SummarySixteen patients, with a total of 18 abscesses, were treated by aspiration and systemic antibiotic therapy, to which antiepileptic prophylaxis and corticosteroids were added. Diagnosis of the abscesses and monitoring of their evolution relied principally upon computed tomography; this technique was also used per-operatively when aspirating small abscesses.Bacteriological examinations were positive in all our cases and a polymicrobial flora was found in half of these.One or, eventually, two aspirations within the same week were sufficient, in most cases, to promote healing. Nevertheless, in three patients, the abscesses, however sterilized, did not show any volume reduction, probably because of adhesions to the dura mater, of a large part of the abscess surface area.One patient died from concomitant cardiac disease and one patient remained seriously disabled. Epilepsy was observed as a sequela, in six patients.This study emphasizes the role of neuroradiological and bacteriological examinations, whilst surgery may be restricted, in most cases, to a simple aspiration.


Acta Neurochirurgica | 1998

The Association of Tranexamic Acid and Nimodipine in the Pre-operative Treatment of Ruptured Intracranial Aneurysms

Guy Stroobandt; O Lambert; E. Menard

Summary In the scope of a late intervention policy on ruptured intracranial aneurysms, on D.+12 on an average, we first used tranexamic acid, at moderate doses: 3 g orally or 1.5 g intravenously per day. We, subsequently, added nimodipine, usually 240 mg orally per day or 2 mg intravenously per hour. The medical treatment consisted of amply sufficient hydration, and in systematic and regular administration of analgesics and sedatives. Hypotension was absolutely avoided; if necessary, an antihypertensive treatment was prescribed very cautiously. Phenytoin was regularly given.In the present study, we try to answer the following questions: (1) Can we confirm that the preventive action of tranexamic acid remains as effective, when doses, markedly lower than usually recommended, are used? (2) Does nimodipine prevent the increase of pre-operative ischaemic complications, which should be expected when tranexamic acid is administered?Amongst 101 patients with SAH of proven aneurysmal origin, 84 were treated with tranexamic acid and nimodipine. In 25 patients, an aneurysm was not visualised; 21 received this treatment. For several reasons, only a retrospective study was possible, to evaluate the results of our antifibrinolytic and calcium-blocking therapies, on rebleeding and pre-operative delayed ischaemia. We compared, therefore, similar cases from the literature, with our own cases, taking into consideration the clinical grades, the days of admission and of intervention, the moment of rebleeding and of delayed pre-operative ischaemia, etc.The following impressions emerge: (1) same effectiveness of moderate doses of tranexamic acid; (2) no increase of pre-operative delayed ischaemic complications, in comparison with patients not receiving antifibrinolytics but nimodipine; (3) important role of a devastating initial bleed and of operative complications; (4) difficulty of avoiding rebleeding at D.0, whatever the therapeutic measures, medical and/or surgical.


Acta Neurochirurgica | 1999

Clinical and MRI long term evolution of intracavernous and carotid ophtalmic artery aneurysms, treated by common carotid ligation.

Guy Stroobandt; Thierry Duprez; E. Menard

Summary In four large, 15–25 mm, internal carotid artery aneurysms (3 intracavernous and 1 carotid ophtalmic), treatment by common carotid ligation was preferred. Pre- and postoperative MRI were obtained, at a delay between 5 to 9 years. Recovery of the ocular and visual symptomatology was a function of the role played by mechanical and/or ischaemic factors. No early or late consequences, ascribable to the common carotid ligation, were observed. Aneurysmal thrombosis occurred in the first postoperative week, but retraction of the thrombosed aneurysms was only obvious and maximal after several months. For this reason, rapid clinical recovery could be due, in the first instance, to the loss of aneurysmal pulsatility. Complete disappearance of the aneurysm was observed in two cases. In the other two, a small remnant of the initial lesion, without any unfavourable consequences, was revealed, respectively 6 and 9 years after the intervention, by current, modern-days, MRA.


The Journal of Nuclear Medicine | 1994

Brain tumor imaging with PET and 2-[carbon-11]thymidine.

Thierry Vander Borght; Stanislas Pauwels; Luc Lambotte; Daniel Labar; S. De Maeght; Guy Stroobandt; C. Laterre


American Journal of Neuroradiology | 1998

Diagnosis of intracranial aneurysms: accuracy of MR angiography at 0.5 T.

Cécile Grandin; P. Mathurin; Thierry Duprez; Guy Stroobandt; Frank Hammer; Pierre Goffette; Guy Cosnard


American Journal of Neuroradiology | 2000

Vasospasm after subarachnoid hemorrhage: diagnosis with MR angiography.

Cécile Grandin; Guy Cosnard; Frank Hammer; Thierry Duprez; Guy Stroobandt; P. Mathurin


Acta Neurologica Belgica | 1997

Spinal dural arterio-venous fistula: an underdiagnosed disease?

Cécile Grandin; Thierry Duprez; Guy Stroobandt; Emile-Christian Laterre; P. Mathurin

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Christian Thauvoy

Université catholique de Louvain

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P. Mathurin

Université catholique de Louvain

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Claude Gilliard

Université catholique de Louvain

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Jean-Marie Brucher

Catholic University of Leuven

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P. Fransen

Cliniques Universitaires Saint-Luc

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Philippe Evrard

Catholic University of Leuven

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C. Laterre

Université catholique de Louvain

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Emile-Christian Laterre

Université catholique de Louvain

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Thierry Duprez

Cliniques Universitaires Saint-Luc

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Cécile Grandin

Université catholique de Louvain

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