To study the clinical efficacy of robot-assisted stereotactic hematoma puncture and fragmentation in the treatment of moderate basal ganglia hemorrhage.
Approach:
Key Findings:
Experimental group showed reduced pulmonary infection rates.
Shorter NICU hospitalization duration in the experimental group.
Decreased mannitol usage duration in the experimental group.
Reduced 72-hour cerebral edema volume in the experimental group.
Significantly improved postoperative GCS and NIHSS scores in the experimental group.
Better ADL scores at 1 month and lower mRS scores at 3 months postoperatively in the experimental group.
Interpretation:
Robot-assisted stereotactic minimally invasive puncture and aspiration for basal ganglia hemorrhage catheterization provides more precise and thorough hematoma evacuation, reduces postoperative complication rates, and significantly promotes postoperative neurological recovery.
Limitations:
Retrospective design may introduce selection bias.
Limited sample size may affect generalizability of results.
Lack of long-term follow-up data.
Conclusion:
Robot-assisted techniques may offer superior outcomes for patients with moderate basal ganglia hemorrhage compared to traditional methods.
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