Cases reported "Cerebral Hemorrhage"

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1/9. Antidepressant-induced adverse reactions in a patient with hemorrhagic stroke.

    OBJECTIVE: To report a case of antidepressant-induced adverse drug reactions in a patient with hemorrhagic stroke. CASE SUMMARY: A 56-year-old man developed life-threatening adverse reactions after fluoxetine was added to his previously prescribed regimen of buspirone and olanzapine. One week after starting fluoxetine 60 mg/day, the patient developed syndrome of inappropriate antidiuretic hormone secretion and serotonin syndrome concurrently. The patient had experienced a hemorrhagic stroke before the adverse drug reactions occurred. DISCUSSION: A patient with a history of hemorrhagic stroke developed serious adverse drug reactions when fluoxetine was added to his drug therapy. When the combination therapy was stopped, all adverse effects gradually disappeared and laboratory abnormalities were corrected. The likelihood that the adverse reactions were caused by fluoxetine is probable according to the Naranjo probability scale. In addition, a history of stroke may be a risk factor for the development of such reactions. CONCLUSIONS: Today, patients with depression after experiencing a stroke are treated more effectively, but antidepressant-induced adverse drug reactions may be serious. A growing number of patients are treated for post-stroke depression; they require close supervision and careful dosing of antidepressants to prevent full-blown adverse reactions from occurring.
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2/9. Cerebral haemorrhage and berry aneurysm: evidence from a family for a pattern of autosomal dominant inheritance.

    Although families with several members suffering a cerebral haemorrhage have been reported previously, a family history of this stroke sub-type has not yet been firmly established as a risk factor for the disease. A family in whom cerebral haemorrhage has been clearly documented in five members, spanning three generations, is reported. In three a berry aneurysm was detected. There was no evidence of hypertension among any of the five cases. A sixth member of the family probably died of a cerebral haemorrhage but no necropsy was performed. By using established incidence rates for cerebral haemorrhage in the population, the probability of five such unrelated events arising in any family of similar size and longevity was calculated to be 4.9 x 10(-10). This family strengthens the case that an underlying genetic susceptibility does exist for a proportion of patients who have a cerebral haemorrhage. This susceptibility appears to be consequent upon berry aneurysm formation. The distribution of cases within this family is consistent with an autosomal dominant pattern of inheritance.
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3/9. Brain potentials reveal covert facial recognition in prosopagnosia.

    Brain potentials were recorded in a prosopagnosic patient, in response to familiar and unfamiliar faces he was asked to recognize. The amplitude of the P300 component was found to be an inverse function of probability for each category of faces despite the patient's inability to consciously recognize the familiarity of these faces. In addition, P300 latency varied from 700 to 800 msec according to the familiarity of the faces, and P300 scalp location was different as a function of faces probability and overt recognition. The results imply that covert facial recognition may be evidenced in using event-related potentials of the brain. They also demonstrate that automatic and covert processing of face familiarity are preserved, but prolonged in this patient.
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4/9. Prolonged neonatal alloimmune thrombocytopenic purpura associated with anti-Bak(a). Two cases in siblings.

    Two cases of prolonged neonatal alloimmune thrombocytopenic purpura in siblings due to anti-Bak(a) are reported. The first case was complicated by an intracranial hemorrhage due to severe thrombocytopenia, but the second case had no untoward complications. Delivery by cesarean section and immediate platelet support from "compatible" (nonmaternal) donors may have contributed to the more favorable outcome in the second case. An analysis of the gene frequencies of platelet-specific antigens suggests that factors other than the potential for maternal exposure to antigen determine the incidence of affected births. knowledge of gene frequencies may, however, permit a priori prenatal calculation of the probability of an affected birth for couples with a previously affected child even if the genotype of the father is unknown.
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5/9. Accidental high voltage electrocution: a rare neurosurgical problem.

    The authors describe a case of accidental electrocution from a high voltage current in a young worker, who was struck by the electric shock in the mid-occipital region. The case is especially interesting due to the improbability of anyone surviving after receiving a shock of more than 1000 V., and to the development of bilateral parieto-occipital haemorrhagic infarction with spastic paraparesis, directly caused by the high voltage current and not indirectly by heat generation or secondary head trauma.
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6/9. Application of decision analysis to management of cerebral arteriovenous malformation.

    Consideration of cerebral arteriovenous malformation (AVM) illustrates how decision analysis may be used to evaluate systematically two treatment options--surgery before bleeding occurs or conservative management. The analysis balances risk of immediate surgical mortality and morbidity against the delayed risks inherent in conservative management. Because the condition is rare and local experience therefore scant, probability estimates have to be obtained from the literature. From these probability estimates and from estimates of attractiveness of various outcomes (made in this study by a clinician) a quantitative assessment of the risks and benefits of surgical versus medical management can be calculated. The finding is that conservative treatment is preferable to surgery in patients who present with an AVM before bleeding occurs, even when the probability estimates used are those obtained under conditions more favourable to surgery. The decision also remains unchanged when different attractiveness values are assigned to possible outcomes.
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7/9. Delayed high dose contrast CT: identifying patients at risk of massive hemorrhagic infarction.

    A prospective clinical study was done on 20 patients referred for computed tomography within 28 hr of a cerebral ischemic event. The patients were scanned before, immediately after, and 3 hr after a high dose of intravenous contrast medium was administered to produce prolonged high blood iodine levels. In seven patients the delayed scan demonstrated a heretofore undescribed type of contrast enhancement which represents the early massive vasogenic edema seen in experimental animals before confluent hemorrhagic infarction. Four of the seven patients developed hemorrhagic infarction. None of the remaining 11 patients with cerebral infarctions and conventional postenhancement CT patterns showed hemorrhage on follow-up CT scans or at autopsy. Two patients with transient ischemic attacks had normal CT scans. It may now be possible to predict patients in whom there is high probability of hemorrhagic infarction before blood appears on CT. Treatment of these patients should probably be aimed at preventing the devastating effects of the vasogenic edema. We speculate that heparinization or bypass surgery to reestablish circulation may be contraindicated in this group.
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8/9. Prediction of results following Gamma Knife surgery for brain stem and other centrally located arteriovenous malformations: relation to natural course.

    Two models for predicting the results of Gamma Knife surgery for brain stem and other centrally located arteriovenous malformations (AVMs) are presented. By using these models, the probability of total obliteration and the risk of complications can be predicted. The model to predict the probability for obliteration is based on the following two observations. First, there is a positive relationship between the minimum dose given to the AVM nidus and the incidence of obliteration. Second, there is a negative relationship between the AVM nidus volume and the minimum dose given in the obliterated cases. The risk estimation model is also based on two observations. First, centrally located AVMs carry a higher risk of complications than those located peripherally. Second, the average dose to volumes which are large for radiosurgery is related to the incidence of complications. The findings of this study may be used to estimate the consequences of Gamma Knife treatment for every individual case prior to the treatment. This makes a comparison between different treatment options and no treatment possible. The risk of hemorrhage without any treatment is also quantified.
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9/9. Hypothalamic juvenile pilocytic astrocytoma presenting with intracerebral hemorrhage.

    hemorrhage of juvenile pilocytic astrocytomas is very rare. However, it is clinically important because a high probability of a fatal outcome exists if hemorrhage occurs outside the optic nerve. hemorrhage of a hypothalamic juvenile pilocytic astrocytoma has been reported only once, from an autopsy examination. We present a successfully managed case. The patient, a 34-year-old man, presented with sudden loss of consciousness. Computed tomography (CT) and magnetic resonance imaging demonstrated an exophytic hypothalamic tumor with a hemorrhage. craniotomy with total removal of the tumor and the hematoma was performed. Histopathologic examination revealed that the tumor was a juvenile pilocytic astrocytoma. Brain CT examination 18 months later revealed no evidence of tumor recurrence. The patient was well, without neurologic deficit, and had a normal social life as of the last follow-up examination 22 months after craniotomy.
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