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- Title
Neurosurgical management of hydrocephalus by a general surgeon in an extremely low resource setting: initial experience in North Kivu province of Eastern Democratic Republic of Congo.
- Authors
Cairo, Sarah B.; Agyei, Justice; Nyavandu, Kavira; Rothstein, David H.; Kalisya, Luc Malemo
- Abstract
<bold>Purpose: </bold>Evaluate the management of hydrocephalus in pediatric patients in the Eastern Democratic Republic of Congo by a general surgeon.<bold>Methods: </bold>Retrospective review of a single institution in the province of North Kivu. Patient charts and surgical notes were reviewed from 2003 to 2016.<bold>Results: </bold>116 procedures were performed for an average of 8.9 per year. 51.7% of surgeries were on female patients with an average age of 13.6 ± 22.7. The average distance traveled from home to hospital was 153.7 km but ranged from 5 to 1420 km. The majority of hydrocephalus was due to neonatal sepsis (57%); 33.6% were classified as congenital; 9.5% of cases followed myelomeningocele closure. 97.4% had a ventriculoperitoneal (VP) shunt placed. Endoscopic third ventriculostomy combined choroid plexus cauterization (ETV/CPC) was performed in 2.5% of patients. Shunt infection occurred in 9.5% of patients, shunt dysfunction or obstruction in 5.2% and shunt exteriorization in 1.7%; no complications occurred in patients who underwent ETV/CPC.<bold>Conclusion: </bold>VP shunt is the predominant management for hydrocephalus in this environment with increasing use of ETV/CPC. Further research is needed to evaluate variability by etiology, short and long-term outcomes of procedures performed by neurosurgeons and general surgeons, and regional epidemiologic variability.
- Subjects
CONGO (Democratic Republic); HYDROCEPHALUS in children; NEUROSURGERY; MYELOMENINGOCELE; RETROSPECTIVE studies; THERAPEUTICS; CEREBROSPINAL fluid shunts; HYDROCEPHALUS; SURGEONS; VENTRICULOCISTERNOSTOMY; TREATMENT effectiveness; DISEASE incidence
- Publication
Pediatric Surgery International, 2018, Vol 34, Issue 4, p467
- ISSN
0179-0358
- Publication type
journal article
- DOI
10.1007/s00383-018-4238-0