Neurologia medico-chirurgica
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Neurol. Med. Chir. (Tokyo) · Oct 2001
Case ReportsCryptococcal meningoencephalitis presenting with an unusual magnetic resonance imaging appearance--case report.
A 61-year-old female with a past history of gastric cancer presented with altered mental status, a few seizures, and low-grade fever. Lumbar puncture revealed elevated cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) pressure, lymphocytic pleocytosis, elevated protein level, remarkably decreased glucose level, and presence of cryptococcal antigen. Cryptococcus neoformans was identified by India ink staining and culture of CSF. ⋯ However, neurological deterioration and reconfirmation of C. neoformans in CSF indicated recurrent cryptococcal inflammation. The sulcal hyperintensity on FLAIR imaging may indicate a high CSF protein concentration in the subarachnoid space. Such cerebral sulcal hyperintensity is an unusual MR imaging finding of cryptococcal meningoencephalitis, and may be an early sign of procrastinating process or recurrent inflammation even if the findings of CSF obtained by lumbar puncture are normal.
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Neurol. Med. Chir. (Tokyo) · Oct 2001
Case ReportsSpontaneous migration of a bullet in the cerebellum--case report.
A 15-year-old boy presented with a gunshot wound in the left cerebellar hemisphere. He was confused and left cerebellar signs were noted. ⋯ Skull radiography obtained just before the third surgery showed that the bullet had returned to the left side, and it was removed easily via the previous craniectomy in the sitting position. The clinical course suggests that in removing a bullet, skull radiography or computed tomography should be obtained just before surgery, or even intraoperatively, and that those findings should be the basis for the surgical procedure and operative position.
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Neurol. Med. Chir. (Tokyo) · Aug 2001
Case ReportsAcute subdural hematoma in patients who underwent aneurysm clipping--four case reports.
Four patients presented with intracranial hemorrhage mainly consisting of acute subdural hematoma (ASDH), who had all undergone aneurysm clipping 2-20 years earlier. Whether the clips had slipped or new trauma had caused the bleeding was difficult to determine, since the initial computed tomography showed that the subarachnoid hemorrhage or the intracerebral hematoma developed near the clips. Angiography in three patients showed that the clips had not slipped off. ⋯ Anti-platelet agents and ventriculoperitoneal shunting had been previously used in two patients with no causal signs of trauma. The outcomes were poor in three patients and one patient died. Weakening of the extra- or intracranial structure after aneurysm surgery might have been involved together with the postoperative anti-platelet agent and shunt treatment in the etiology of the present ASDH.
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Neurol. Med. Chir. (Tokyo) · Aug 2001
Surgical treatment of chronic subdural hematoma in 500 consecutive cases: clinical characteristics, surgical outcome, complications, and recurrence rate.
Chronic subdural hematoma (CSDH) is one of the most common clinical entities in daily neurosurgical practice. The diagnosis and treatment are well established, but recurrence, complications, and factors related to these problems, especially in the elderly, are not completely understood. This study evaluated the clinical features, radiological findings, and surgical results in a large series of the patients treated at the same institution. 500 consecutive patients (359 men and 141 women) with CSDH were treated by burr hole craniostomy with closed system drainage from January 1987 through February 1999. ⋯ Old age, pre-existing cerebral infarction, and persistence of subdural air after surgery were significantly correlated with poor brain re-expansion (p < 0.001). Twenty-seven patients (5.4%) suffered postoperative complications, of which 13 cases were acute subdural hematoma caused by incomplete hemostasis of the scalp wound and four cases were tension pneumocephalus. Careful hemostasis and complete replacement of subdural hematoma by normal saline to prevent influx of air into the subdural space will further improve the surgical outcome for patients with CSDH.
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Neurol. Med. Chir. (Tokyo) · Jul 2001
Case ReportsTransorbital penetrating injury by a chopstick--case report.
A one-year-old boy presented with orbitocranial penetrating injury by a chopstick. Neurological examination did not reveal abnormal findings. Skull radiography did not reveal any sign of fracture and there were no abnormal findings. ⋯ The wound may be superficial and trivial. Major neurological deficit does not usually manifest immediately, so the penetrating injury may be overlooked. If the foreign body is retained in the orbit and cranium, severe infectious complications may occur later.