Neurochirurgie
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We report the fourth case of primitive malignant melanoma arising in a spinal nerve root. A 39-year-old woman complained of one-year low back pain radiating to the right thigh and knee, and loss of 7 kg. Clinical examination found moderate quadricipital amyotrophy and hypoesthesia of anterior side of the thigh. ⋯ The L3/L4 foramen scalloping is unusual for a malignant lesion with theoretic high-speed development. The other 3 patients (reported in the literature) survive more than 3 years. The histological features of malignant lesion with benign clinical features lead to interrogation upon the actual pathologic classification.
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MRI signal of a subdural hematoma (SDH) is often regarded as similar to that of an intracerebral hematoma but no precise study has analyzed the evolution of the signal of subdural hematomas. Their dating is however significant, in particular in the child, within the context of the diagnosis of child abuse. The objective of this study is to compare with MRI a group of adult patients having a subdural and/or intracerebral, in order to study the evolution of the signals of these two types of hematomas. ⋯ The time course of MRI signal of subdural hematomas is different from that of cerebral hematomas. This difference is significant in T2 sequence and FLAIR, especially in the early subacute period. These radiographic observations in adults can be useful for the MRI dating of subdural hematomas in shaken-baby syndrome.
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Case Reports
[Giant osteoid osteoma of the posterior skull base. A case report and literature review].
Osteoid osteoma is a benign bone neoplasm which is seen in the long bones. It is rarely described in the cranium. Posterior skull base osteoma is extremely rare and has been anecdotally reported. ⋯ Although benign and rare, osteoid osteoma can present with neurological deficit due to mass effect and involvement of nervous structures especially in the posterior skull base.
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Case Reports
[Aneurysmal bone cyst of the cranial base treated by partial resection and calcitonin injection. A case report].
First published report of a cranial aneurysmal bone cyst (ABC) treated successfully with intralesional injection of calcitonin. ⋯ We reviewed the pertinent literature concerning percutaneous treatment of ABC. The percutaneous intralesionnal injection of calcitonin was reported in the literature only in 3 publications reporting 9 cases that did not involve the skull. This treatment seems safe and effective, worthy in cranial base ABCs that are difficult to resect completely.
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Case Reports
[Guillain-Barré syndrome secondary to cranial surgery: direct or fortuitous relationship?].
The Guillain-Barré syndrome, an acute polyradiculonevritis (PRN), usually appears after a post-infectious immuno-allergic reaction. We report a case of acute PRN following cranial surgery. Post-surgical Guillain-barré syndrome is rarely described. We reviewed the pathophysiological mechanisms possibly involved in this disease that have to be evoked in patients with abnormal post-surgical neurological symptoms.