Journal of neurology
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Journal of neurology · Jan 1976
Case Reports[Intracranial and spinal hemorrhage in haemophilia (author's transl)].
Among 234 hemophiliacs, 14 patients (5.9%) with intracranial and 1 patient (0.4%) with intramedullary hemorrhage were observed and examined. The average age at the time of hemorrhage was 17 years in patients with severe hemophilia and 43 years in patients with moderate hemophilia. The patients with mild hemophilia and intracranial bleeding were 5 and 58 years old, respectively. ⋯ Only in 1 case with an acquired inhibitor did a local hematoma develop at the site of puncture for the angiography. The same diagnostic procedures should be performed after substitution therapy with anti-hemophiliac plasma in a hemophiliac without inhibitor as in non-hemophiliacs if intracranial or intramedullar bleeding is suspected. In hemophiliacs with an anticoagulant, angiography or lumbar puncture should be performed only in exceptional cases.
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Journal of neurology · Jan 1976
[Cerebral embolism and psychosis with special reference to cardiac surgery (author's transl)].
Cerebral embolism can manifest itself in certain cases as pure psychosis. In the absence of neurological symptoms it might be mistaken for schizophrenia or manic-depressive psychosis. Cardiac disease and cardiac surgery involve a high risk of embolism. ⋯ Patients who develop these "late" psychoses have a significantly higher correlation with endogenous psychoses in their family histories. On the psychopathological level--in the absence of disturbances of consciousness and orientation--it is not possible to differentiate between "exogenous" and "endogenous" psychosis. A special type of psychopathological reaction is dependent, as in neurological disease, on the severity of brain damage, its localization and on hereditary factors.