Journal of clinical neuroscience : official journal of the Neurosurgical Society of Australasia
-
This case report describes a 46-year-old man whose first symptom was an attack of acute flank pain, followed by the gradual onset neurological symptoms. We demonstrated a small nidus and serpentine signal-void area in the spinal cord by MRI and diagnosed a glomus type of spinal arteriovenous malformation (AVM). Flank pain is a rare initial finding in an adult with spinal AVM. In cases with acute flank pain, neurologists should consider spinal AVM as a differential diagnosis.
-
Pituitary apoplexy is an uncommon syndrome characterised by sudden onset of headache, meningeal signs, visual disturbances, ophthalmoplegia and confusion. Documented recurrent apoplexy or treated apoplexy is even rarer with only few reports in the literature. Between 1994 and 2001, 18 patients were treated for pituitary apoplexy at Bayindir Medical Centre through transsphenoidal route. ⋯ Additional treatment in the form of radiosurgery was found necessary for the first patient. Surgical excision of the pituitary tumours with apoplexy reduces the risk of recurrent bleedings but eradication is not a rule. These patients need to be followed closely in the postoperative period for possible recurrence of bleeding.
-
We wish to report a rare case of clear-cell meningioma in the lumbosacral region in a 34-year-old male patient who presented to us with lower back pain and leg pain. The management of the patient will be reported and histological appearance discussed. This rare tumour in a difficult anatomical position presents a challenge that requires management in a multidisciplinary fashion.
-
Editorial Historical Article
Anaesthesia and neurosurgery: new developments in a long and interesting relationship.
-
Comparative Study
Increased risk of lead fracture and migration in dystonia compared with other movement disorders following deep brain stimulation.
Deep brain stimulation (DBS) therapy is a continually expanding field in the functional neurosurgical treatment of movement disorders. However, the occurrence of adverse events related to implanted hardware cannot be overlooked. ⋯ Interestingly, all of these failures occurred in dystonia patients (18.4% of all dystonia patients and 9.2% of all electrodes). We postulate on mechanisms that may explain why these complications predominate in this group of patients.