Neuroradiology
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Review Case Reports
Peripheral vascular gunshot bullet embolus migration to the cerebral circulation. Report and literature review.
Bullet embolization to intracranial branches of the major cerebral arteries is a rare complication of gunshot wounds. A review of the literature on cerebral vascular bullet embolization from peripheral sources revealed a number of single case reports that included 12 cases involving the anterior cerebral circulation, and one which involved the posterior circulation. This communication details two additional subjects who were treated at our institution.
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A young women presented with chronic headaches associated with a cyst of the right lateral ventricle. The diagnosis of intraventricular so-called "arachnoid" cyst was supported by CT scan, MRI and stereotactic puncture. MRI was of great value for demonstrating that the cyst was located within the lateral ventricule, that it was delineated by a thin wall adherent to the choroid plexus and that the cyst content was CSF-like.
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We describe a case of a vascular mass arising secondary to a postoperative vertebral arteriovenous fistula mimicking recurrent cervical neurofibroma on CT in a patient with neurofibromatosis. Angiography was required for diagnosis. The "recurrent tumor" resolved following balloon embolization of the fistula.
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The authors report a series of 16 patients with venous anomalies or abnormalities of the posterior fossa studied by angiography, CT and/or MRI. We believe that so-called venous angiomas are extreme anatomic variants that drain normal territories, and we prefer to call them developmental venous anomalies (DVAs). Posterior fossa DVAs, like the supratentorial ones are classified according to their drainage into deep and superficial types. ⋯ The clinical and radiological files were reviewed and a direct relationship between symptoms and localization was found in all patients with CVM. In 2 cases venous dysplasia was found: 1 Sturge-Weber and 1 first branchial arch syndrome. Both posterior fossa venous abnormalities were incidental findings.
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Sixteen cases of thoracic radiculomyelopathy due to ossification of the ligamentum flavum (OLF) were analyzed. The patients ranged in age from 39 to 78 years (average 57 years). There were 13 men and 3 women. ⋯ The disadvantages of using computed tomography for diagnosing OLF included the necessity for the scan level to be previously decided by other methods because computed tomography of the entire spine was impractical. Magnetic resonance imaging was performed in 14 patients and gave important information about OLF and the compression of the spinal cord. The combination of MRI and computed tomography seems the most useful for the precise diagnosis of OLF.