No shinkei geka. Neurological surgery
-
We report a case of a 44-year-old woman successfully treated by an epidural blood patch for intracranial hypotension due to cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) leakage into the thoracic cavity after thoracic spine surgery. The patient was admitted to our hospital with the complaint of postural headaches. She had received anterior thoracic instrumentation for thoracic disc herniation four months earlier. ⋯ Postoperatively postural headaches immediately disappeared. MRI taken one year later revealed disappearance of diffuse dural enhancement, and 111In-DTPA cisternography revealed no CSF fluid leaks. Epidural blood patch seems to be a choice of treatment for CSF leak after spinal surgery.
-
Review Case Reports
[A case of a persistent primitive proatlantal intersegmental artery with a ruptured basilar bifurcation aneurysm].
A case of persistent primitive proatlantal intersegmental artery (PPPIA) associated with a ruptured basilar bifurcation aneurysm was reported. A 44-year-old male with sudden headache was admitted to our hospital. CT scan revealed subarachnoid hemorrhage. ⋯ To our knowledge, this is the first report of such an association of vascular anomalies. The frequency of PPPIA combined with the intracranial aneurysm is relatively high, whereas the occurrence of PPPIA is extremely rare. Therefore, it was suggested that some congenital and/or hemodynamic factors changed by PPPIA may affect the pathogenesis of intracranial aneurysms.
-
Review Case Reports
[Brown-Séquard syndrome and cervical CSF leakage due to a knife injury: a case report].
We report a case of Brown-Séquard syndrome and cervical CSF leakage caused by a knife injury. A 34-year-old man was involved in a fight and was stabbed on his occiput and back with a knife. Neurological examination on admission showed right hemiparesis, right hemihypesthesia and left hemihypalgesia, indicating Brown-Séquard syndrome. ⋯ The patient's hemiparesis gradually improved and he underwent rehabilitation. Spinal cord injury due to a stab wound by a knife is rare in Japan. In this case, we suppose that the mechanism of spinal cord injury was due to direct injury by a knife avoiding the lateral corticospinal tract because his right hemiparesis obviously improved.
-
Supratentorial hemangioblastoma is encountered very rarely, with only about 110 cases reported. This report concerns a case of a suprasellar hemangioblastoma associated with thoracic meningioma. A 62-year-old man was admitted with visual disturbance of the left eye. ⋯ The tumor was diagnosed as a meningothelial meningioma. The patient was discharged without evidence of new neurological deficits. Our experience shows that, when a mass is vascularized in the cerebral hemisphere, the possibility of hemangioblastoma needs to be taken into consideration.
-
Review Case Reports
[A case of intrasellar meningioma mimicking pituitary adenoma].
The authors report a patient with a rare intrasellar meningioma mimicking pituitary adenoma. A 60-year-old man was admitted to our hospital for evaluation of general fatigue. He had no neurological deficit including visual function. ⋯ Despite recent advances in neurodiagnostic imaging, it may still be difficult to differentiate pituitary adenoma from intrasellar meningioma. When we re-evaluated the MR imaging, we recognized that the tumor had demonstrated specific findings, ruling out pituitary adenoma, namely bright and homogeneous enhancement, dense enhancement in the early phase on the dynamic MR study, and flow void signal within the mass. The authors emphasize that careful evaluations of MR imaging will allow the correct preoperative diagnosis in patients with intrasellar meningioma mimicking pituitary macroadenoma.