Skull Base Meningioma Surgeries: How Aggressive Is Aggressive Enough?doi:10.1055/s-0040-1702599Liao, SebastianChen, Shao-ChingHsu, SanfordJournal of Neurological Surgery Part B: Skull Base
However, with the recent abrupt change in environmental conditions in which processed food is readily available and in which there is little need for physical activity, what was an asset during evolution has become a liability in the current‘obesogenic’environment.[1] Thus, the fat accumulation ...
even higher average expression in the crocidolite-with-tumor samples as compared to the crocidolite samples and only 327 genes have a lower average expression. However, this asymmetry is not generally true, when looking at all genes significantly changed between crocidolite with tumors and crocid...
Nearly half of surgically removed meningiomas have come back after 20 years so that is why you need to have regular imaging and monitorning after the meningioma surgery. You should have a meningioma removed if it presses against your brain or spinal cord but most meningiomas do not need to b...
doi:10.1093/neuonc/noae194Tosefsky KiraYip StephenNeuro-Oncology
On the other hand, if the cord is pushed backward, an epi-arachnoid approach is sometimes impossible. The dura attached with meningioma need not be removed because the tumor did not originate from the dura. Dural curettage and coagulation results in as low a recurrence rate as aggressive ...