Neurosurgery Room Set-up
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Transcript Neurosurgery Room Set-up
Pathologies, Procedures
and Room Set-Up
Degenerative diseases - arthritis, osteoperosis
Herniated disks or bulging disk
Commonly occur at L4-5, L5-S1
Spinal stenosis
Most common cause for neck pain and back pain
Narrowing of spinal canal
Common in cervical & lumbar regions
Tumors
Most common are metastatic
Cord compression causing pain and weakness
Most common injuries are fractures,
subluxation, disk herniation
Cervical spine most vulnerable to injury
Need early stabilization to minimize cord
trauma
Spinal cord injury
Complete: lacks sensation, position sense, &
voluntary motor function below level of injury
Incomplete: still has some sensory, position sense &
motor impulses present
Removal of one or more vertebral lamina from
to expose spinal canal to treat
Used to treat:
Compression fracture
Degenerative changes
Dislocation
Herniated disk
Tumor causing pressure on spinal cord
Removal of ruptured annulus fibrosus or
herniated nucleus pulposus
Often replaced with bone graft
Herniated or ruptured disk most common
injury seen by neurosurgeons
Most occur in lower lumbar region
Stabilization of spine by locking vertebrae
together
Uses:
Plates
Screws
Rods
May be indicated following injury or excision
of bone
Anterior Cervical Spine
Supine with mayfield pins or horseshoe on radiolucent
table or regular bed
May need cervical traction
Arms tucked to side
Pillow under knees
Anterior Lumbar/Thoracic
Supine
Pillow under knees
Radiolucent table
Rails clear for retractor (bookwalter, omni)
General surgeon needed to gain access to spine
Posterior cervical
Prone with head in mayfield pins or face on foam pillow
Gel chest rolls, wilson, or jackson frame
Arms tucked down to side
Radiolucent table
Posterior lumbar/thoracic
Prone on gel chest rolls, Jackson, Wilson frame, or
Cloward
Arms overhead not extended greater than 90 degrees
Radiolucent table
Make sure there are enough people to safely
transfer
XLIF (eXtreme
lumbar interbody
fusion)
Incision on
patient’s side
Lateral decubitus
position (90º)
Secure body so no
moving
Iliac crest at break
in bed
Bovie, suction and warmer at foot of bed
C-arm available
May use flat plate instead
Midas
Headlight
May use microscope
Blood clot causing increase ICP
and compression of brain
Three types
Epidural
Subdural
Intracerebral
Burr Holes or Craniotomy or
Craniectomy to decompress
brain and remove/drain blood
clots
Tumors within the brain or
its membranes
Metastatic tumors more
common than primary
Classified by histologic type
glioblastoma, menegioma
Symptoms
Progressive neurologic
deficit
motor weakness
Headaches and seizures
Diffuse increase in ICP
Depends on location
Excessive accumulation of CSF in ventricles resulting
in increased ICP
Reasons
Congenital abnormalities, aqueductal stenosis, tumor,
subarachnoid hemorrhage, meningitis
Common among young children and older adults
Acute or Chronic
Infants
Due to obstruction, poor absorption, or overproduction of CSF
Enlarged head, seizures, vomitting, sleepy
Adults
Impaired balance, memory loss, poor coordination, headache
Bur Holes
Craniotomy
Small hole for minimum
exposure to brain
Hematoma, VP shunt
Remove bone flap and is
replaced at end of case
with plates/screws
Hematoma, aneurism,
tumor
Craniectomy
permanent removal of
section of skull
Severe head injury, tumor,
infected bone
Supine
Prone
Approach most commonly for frontal, parietal and
temporal lobes
Mayfield pins or horseshoe or head on gel doughnut
Approach for occipital lobe
Head in mayfield pins
Semi fowlers
Head in mayfield pins
For occipital approach
Mayfield pins
Bacitracin ointment for pins
Surgeon will place pins and have control of head
while transferring patient
Do not move the patient after pins placed and head
locked in place, could break neck
May turn the bed 90 or 180 degrees
At least 1 arm tucked
Clip hair
Save hair for patient
Mayfield with pins or horseshoe headrest
Bovie, suction and warmer at foot of bed
Midas
Microscope
Headlight
Clippers
Supine
Arms tucked
Pillow under knees
Head on pillow or in
mayfield
May turn bed
Often assisted by an
ENT surgeon
Bovie, suction and
warmer at foot of bed
Microscope
Stereostatic
navigation
Mayo prep stand to
include:
Local, bayonet
forceps, nasal
speculum, syringe
and neuro patties
Catheter placed in ventricle through bur hole and
connected to external drainage system
One way valve system drains CSF away from
ventricle into the peritoneum
Supine
May need access to abdomen
Arms tucked
Pillow under knees
May turn bed
May send CSF
Confirm implant with surgeon
Local
Bacitracin ointment
Bacitracin irrigation
Hemostatic agents
Bone grafts
Crani plates
Fusion hardware
Electosurgery:
monopolar, bipolar
Bone wax
Sponges
Cottonoids
Hemaclips
Thrombin
Floseal/Surgiflo
Catalyzes conversion of
fibrinogen to fibrin
Soak cotton patties or
gelfoam in thrombin and
then apply topically
Gelatin matrix is mixed
with thrombin
Topical gel that clots
bleeding site
Gelfoam
Absorbable gelatin
sponge placed topically
over bleeders, often
soaked in thrombin
Avitene
Surgicel
Collagen hemostat,
usually a loose fibrous
form that is placed
topically with bleeding
surface, attracts
platelets to the area
Oxidized regenerated
cellulose pad, placed
topically & forms clot,
as absorbs it becomes
gel
Local Anesthetic with
epinephrine
Cancellous bone chips
DBX bone putty
Demineralized Bone Matrix used
to fill gaps or voids in bone
Absorbs as bone grows and
takes up the space
BMP
Bone Morphogenetic Protein
(synthetic) is reconstituted then
absorbed into a collagen sponge
The BMP stimulates bone
growth and the sponge gets
absorbed
Osteocel
Contains stem cells so acts like
autographs because biologically
active
Kept in freezer