No shinkei geka. Neurological surgery
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A contralateral extra-axial hematoma sometimes occurs during an operation on an acute subdural hematoma and may become fatal. Using a combined procedure of burr hole evacuation and craniotomy, we treated 2 cases of multiple traumatic acute subdural hematomas. Our policy for such cases is first to perform a burr hole evacuation for the acute subdural hematoma in the emergency room, while simultaneously preparing the operation room for a possible further operation. ⋯ Though his intracranial pressure was well managed during the acute stage, one of the patients died 21 days after the trauma due to an extensive brain infarction caused by vasospasm. The other regained consciousness and was able to walk 5 months after the trauma in spite of cerebral infarction from vasospasm. The possible mechanism of vasospasm in severe head injury is also discussed.
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A 36-year-old woman with 4 cerebral aneurysms at unusual sites including bilateral M2 bifurcation aneurysms is reported. She had been in good health in the previous 5 years since the treatment for a ruptured aneurysm at the end of the azygos anterior cerebral artery when she was 31 years old. Five years later, she became comatose with a huge hematoma in the right temporal lobe due to the rupture of the aneurysm at the right M2 bifurcation, which had been very small 5 years ago. ⋯ Postoperative angiograms revealed a de novo aneurysm at the left M2 bifurcation and an aneurysm at the origin of the lenticulostriate artery, which has remained unchanged for 5 years. An aneurysm at the M2 bifurcation is rare, especially when it is situated bilaterally at the mirror sites. To detect de novo aneurysms, postoperative angiographical follow-up should be considered in patients with multiple aneurysms and in young patients.