HIGHLIGHTS
SUMMARY
Such works are often focused on the study of possible surgical approaches or on the natural history of thalamic gliomas rather than specifically analyzing the safety of thalamus violation and the possible survival improvement that a more aggressive surgery may offer to patients. The authors consider this trend inversion in the case of surgical patients a consequence of the reduction of the mass effect and perilesional edema due to tumor removal and a worsening of the same variables in patients undergoing biopsies, resulting in a slow but inexorable clinical deterioration. Analyzing patients with unchanged . . .

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