학술논문

Stereotactic mesencephalotomy for palliative care pain control: A case report, literature review and plea to rediscover this operation.
Document Type
Case Study
Source
British Journal of Neurosurgery. Aug2016, Vol. 30 Issue 4, p444-447. 4p.
Subject
*MESENCEPHALOTOMY
*PALLIATIVE treatment
*MESENCEPHALON
*CANCER pain
*PAIN management
Language
ISSN
0268-8697
Abstract
IntroductionStereotactic mesencephalotomy is an ablative procedure which lesions the pain pathways (spinothalamic and trigeminothalamic tracts) at the midbrain level to treat medically refractory, nociceptive, contralateral pain. Sparsely reported in contemporary English language literature, this operation is at risk of being lost from the modern-day neurosurgical practice.MethodsWe present a case report and brief review of the literature on stereotactic mesencephalotomy. A 17-year-old girl with cervical cord glioblastoma and medically refractory unilateral head and neck pain was treated with contralateral stereotactic mesencephalotomy. The lesion was placed at the level of the inferior colliculus, half way between the lateral edge of the aqueduct and lateral border of the midbrain.ResultsThe patient had no head and neck pain immediately after the procedure and remained pain-free for the remainder of her life (five months). She was weaned off her pre-operative narcotics and was able to leave hospital, meeting her palliative care goals.ConclusionsCancer-related unilateral head and neck nociceptive pain in the palliative care setting can be successfully treated with stereotactic mesencephalotomy. We believe that stereotactic mesencephalotomy is the treatment of choice for a small number of patients typified by our case. The authors make a plea to the palliative care and neurosurgical communities to rediscover this operation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]