Cases reported "Cysts"

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1/100. Pneumocystography of benign and malignant intracystic growths of the female breast.

    Pneumocystography established the preoperative diagnosis of 20 intracystic breast tumours including 9 benign intracystic papillomas and 11 cases of intracystic carcinoma generally considered to be a rarity. The method is described and details about the clinical and radiologic appearances of both benign and malignant intracystic tumours are given. The importance and advantages of the method are emphasized.
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ranking = 1
keywords = papilloma
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2/100. The Chiari II malformation: lesions discovered within the fourth ventricle.

    Structural lesions associated with the Chiari II malformation have been identified within the fourth ventricle in 8 patients. During the 42-month period encompassing the operations of the 7 patients treated surgically, only 9 other patients were explored without the discovery of some associated structural lesion. The patients ranged in age from 2 to 26 years. The following lesions were identified: glial or arachnoidal cysts (3 patients), glial or choroidal nodules (3 patients) and subependymoma (2 patients). These lesions were all situated in the roof of the fourth ventricle adjacent to or interspersed with the choroid plexus. Only the cystic lesions were identified by preoperative imaging. In only 1 case did the associated lesion, a 2-cm cyst, seem to contribute to the patient's clinical presentation. Structural lesions of the fourth ventricle associated with the Chiari II malformation are common in patients who are submitted to decompression. These lesions may be dysplasias of developmental origin, or they may be reactive lesions related to chronic compression and ischemia. They do not necessarily required biopsy or excision.
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ranking = 229.8884195377
keywords = choroid plexus, choroid, plexus
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3/100. Ruptured distal anterior choroidal artery aneurysm presenting with casting intraventricular haemorrhage.

    This report describes a rare case of a distal anterior choroidal artery aneurysm which developed intraventricular haemorrhage without subarachnoid haemorrhage as shown on computerized tomographic (CT) scan. A 69-year-old hypertensive man suddenly became unconscious. An emergency CT scan showed a severe intraventricular haemorrhage and a small round low-dense lesion within the haematoma at the right trigone. The haematoma with obstructive hydrocephalus made the lateral ventricles larger on the right than on the left. CT scan could not detect any subarachnoid haemorrhage. Right interal carotid angiography revealed a saccular aneurysm at the plexal point of the right anterior choroidal artery. We approached the aneurysm and the small round lesion through the trigone via a right temporo-occipital corticotomy. We could clip the aneurysmal neck and remove the intraventricular haematoma and the papillary cystic mass (corresponding to the small round lesion on CT scan) totally in one sitting. Histological examination revealed the aneurysm to be a true one and the papillary cystic mass to be a choroid plexus cyst.
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ranking = 297.15294728251
keywords = choroid plexus, choroid, plexus
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4/100. choroid plexus papilloma of foramen of Luschka with multiple recurrences and cystic features.

    We present a rare cerebellopontine angle choroid plexus papilloma arising at the foramen of Luschka, without an associated intraventricular component. Distinct features of the tumour on MRI, of multiple recurrences with cystic features, are described, with a review of the literature.
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ranking = 323.68776813765
keywords = choroid plexus, choroid plexus papilloma, choroid, plexus papilloma, plexus, papilloma
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5/100. Endoscopic treatment of symptomatic septum pellucidum cysts: with some preliminary observations on the ultrastructure of the cyst wall: two technical case reports.

    OBJECTIVE AND IMPORTANCE: We describe two patients with symptomatic septum pellucidum cysts managed by endoscopic fenestration. In each case, tissue from the cyst wall was studied to define the origin of the cyst wall and fluid. CLINICAL PRESENTATION: The patients, a 6-year-old boy and a 42-year-old man, each presented with headaches and a syncopal episode. Imaging studies demonstrated large septum pellucidum cysts with obstruction of the foramina of Monro. INTERVENTION: The patients underwent endoscopic transventricular cyst fenestration with a 4-mm steerable fiberscope. The fenestrations were created to allow communication with the right and left lateral ventricles. In one patient, adhesions between the cyst wall and the foramen of Monro were lysed with endoscopic monopolar cautery. Tissue from the cyst walls was removed for examination by electron microscopy. Postoperatively, the headaches and syncopal episodes resolved in both patients. CONCLUSION: Endoscopic fenestration of symptomatic septum pellucidum cysts produces immediate relief of the mass effect of the cyst and resolution of associated symptoms. Cannulation of the lateral ventricle before cyst fenestration prevents inadvertent injury to the fornices, thalamus, internal capsule, caudate nucleus, and septal and thalamostriate veins. The endoscopic approach allows the surgeon to ensure communication within the ventricular system, thus avoiding placement of a shunt. Preliminary ultrastructural analysis indicates that the cyst walls derive from the septum pellucidum rather than the choroid plexus or arachnoid. The cellular machinery necessary for fluid secretion was identified in some specimens.
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ranking = 216.43551398874
keywords = choroid plexus, choroid, plexus
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6/100. The medial posterior choroidal artery as an indicator of masses at the foramen of Monro.

    The angiographic findings in five cases of tumors at the foramen of Monro are presented. Characteristic changes in the course and configuration of the medial posterior choroidal artery are described.
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ranking = 67.264527744805
keywords = choroid
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7/100. Blake's pouch cyst: an entity within the Dandy-Walker continuum.

    Abnormal cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) collections within the posterior fossa are defined by the Dandy-Walker complex (DWC) and by arachnoid cysts (AC). The DWC includes the Dandy-Walker malformation (DWM), the Dandy-Walker variant (DWV) and the mega-cisterna magna (MCM). In addition, Tortori-Donati et al. added persistent Blake's pouch cyst (BPC) as an independent entity within the DWC. BPC represents a posterior ballooning of the superior medullary velum into the cisterna magna. All of these malformations are overlapping developmental anomalies characterized by varying degrees of malformation of the medullary vela, the cerebellar vermis and hemispheres, the fourth ventricle choroid plexus, the posterior fossa subarachnoid cisterns and the enveloping meningeal structures. We present two cases of persistent BPC detected in two adult women without history of gestational or subsequent growth problems. They underwent neuroradiological investigation because of headache and because of recurrent episodes of loss of consciousness, respectively. The MRI findings included tetraventricular hydrocephalus, wide communication of the fourth ventricle and the cystic posterior fossa (i.e. BPC), inferior posterior fossa mass effect with or without hypoplasia of both the cerebellar vermis and the medial aspects of the cerebellar hemispheres, and absence of communication between fourth ventricle and the basal subarachnoid space in the midline posteriorly. Persistent BPC is defined by a failure of embryonic assimilation of the area membranacea anterior within the tela choroidea associated with imperforation of the foramen of Magendie. Typically this condition becomes symptomatic early in life. In the current cases the normal function of the laterally positioned foramina of Luschka probably helped to maintain some CSF flow between intraventricular and subarachnoid spaces, with the establishment of a precarious equilibrium characterized by a compensatory enlargement of the cerebral ventricular system (i.e. hydrocephalus).
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ranking = 229.8884195377
keywords = choroid plexus, choroid, plexus
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8/100. Interhemispheric neuroepithelial cyst associated with agenesis of the corpus callosum. A case report and review of the literature.

    This report describes a neonatal case in whom a large interhemispheric cyst associated with agenesis of the corpus callosum was revealed by fetal ultrasonography and demonstrated by MRI to be multilobulated. Endoscopic fenestration of cysts was initially designed in view of the development of the patient's brain and surgical invasiveness. One year later, when motor paresis of the left arm and progressive enlargement of the cyst on MRI were revealed, open surgery was performed. The histological diagnosis was a neuroepithelial cyst with the feature of choroid plexus epithelia. The clinicopathological features of interhemispheric epithelial cysts associated with agenesis of the corpus callosum are reviewed in the light of differential diagnosis and therapeutic considerations.
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ranking = 216.43551398874
keywords = choroid plexus, choroid, plexus
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9/100. An unusual complication after percutaneous drainage of a pancreatic pseudocyst into the stomach.

    In the period between September 1995 and June 1999, we performed percutaneous drainage into the stomach in 12 patients. There were no complications or pseudocyst recurrences on insertion or after endoscopic removal of the catheter, which was left in site for 1 year on average. After endoscopic removal of the drainage catheter, one of the patients presented with a cystic formation in the stomach wall, which caused stomach emptying disorder. Therefore, the patient had to be reoperated. The cyst wall was incised and a part of the cystic wall sampled for histological examination. The cyst was then drained into the isolated Roux loop of the jejunum. Histological findings of the cystic wall specimen showed the presence of granulation tissue and smooth muscle layers with ganglia cells of myenteric nerve plexus. Despite this complication, we believe that percutaneous endoscopically and ultrasonographically guided drainage of pancreatic pseudocyst into the stomach by means of a double pigtail catheter is a good method that yields encouraging results in sonographically selected cases. The position of the drainage catheter needs to be checked endoscopically, and the catheter should be removed only after 1 year.
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ranking = 3.501780725788
keywords = plexus
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10/100. Persistent large choroid plexus cyst. A case report.

    BACKGROUND: Prenatally diagnosed choroid plexus cysts regress or resolve spontaneously during pregnancy. A persistent large choroid plexus cyst with a prenatal diagnosis has not been reported previously. CASE: A 28-year-old, healthy primigravida was referred to our department at 32 weeks' gestation for a suspected fetal intracranial anomaly. ultrasonography revealed a lateral ventricle 13 mm in width. The ventricle was dilated only in the atrium region. The choroid plexus was not distinct from the inner wall of the ventricle and did not fill the atrium of the lateral ventricle. The patient was followed with bi-weekly ultrasonography until delivery, and the left ventricular width increased from 13 to 17 mm. At 38 weeks' gestation the patient delivered a 3,350-g girl. magnetic resonance imaging showed a 1.7 x 2.5 x 3.0-cm cyst in the left lateral ventricle. Follow-up magnetic resonance imaging scans at 6 and 11 months showed unchanged findings. Clinical and neurologic examinations at 11 months of age showed normal development. CONCLUSION: Although small (< 1 cm), postnatally persistent choroid plexus cysts are clinically insignificant variants of normal; the prognosis of large, persistent cysts (> or = 1 cm) is less clear. Long-term neurologic follow-up is mandatory for these neonates.
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ranking = 1731.4841119099
keywords = choroid plexus, choroid, plexus
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