Cases reported "Intracranial Hemorrhages"

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1/24. Acute intracranial hemorrhage caused by acupuncture.

    A 44-year-old Chinese man developed severe occipital headache, nausea, and vomiting during acupuncture treatment of the posterior neck for chronic neck pain. Computed tomography of the head showed hemorrhage in the fourth, third, and lateral ventricles. A lumbar puncture confirmed the presence of blood. magnetic resonance angiography with gadolinium did not reveal any saccular aneurysms or arteriovenous malformations. The patient's headache resolved over a period of 28 days without any neurological deficits. acupuncture of the posterior neck can cause acute intracranial hemorrhage.
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ranking = 1
keywords = aneurysm
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2/24. Dissecting aneurysms of the posterior inferior cerebellar artery: report of four cases and review of the literature.

    Dissecting aneurysms frequently involve the vertebral arteries and their branches, but those exclusively on the posterior inferior cerebellar artery (pica) represent only 24 cases in the literature, including the four cases discussed in this article. The clinical diagnosis lacks pathognomonic signs or symptoms, with presentations such as subarachnoid haemorrhage or ischaemia of the brain stem or the cerebellum, and the management is controversial. Wrapping, clipping and embolisation of the aneurysms were tried in this series with different outcomes. Exclusion of the pathological segment should be performed, as shown by rebleeding from our case which was wrapped or by progression of the vascular disease in cases where treatment was delayed. Surgical or endovascular occlusion are well tolerated in our cases and in those reported from the literature, which implies the absence of normal perforating branches to the brain stem arising from the proximal dissected segment of the pica and a good collateral circulation. A revascularisation procedure using the occipital artery can be performed in order to prevent infarction if an endovascular test occlusion is not tolerated.
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ranking = 6
keywords = aneurysm
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3/24. Endovascular treatment of radiation-induced petrous internal carotid artery aneurysm presenting with acute haemorrhage. A report of two cases.

    Haemorrhage from rupture of petrous ICA aneurysm can be life threatening and emergency treatment is required. We report 2 cases of radiation-induced petrous internal carotid artery (ICA) aneurysm presenting with acute haemorrhage (epistaxis and otorrhagia) after radiotherapy (RT) for nasopharyngeal carcinoma (NPC). Both patients had a history of RT treatment for NPC. The first patient, a 54-year-old man, presented with sudden severe epistaxis and haemorrhagic shock. The second patient, a 35-year-old man, presented with episodes of severe otorrhagia. The first patient was immediately resuscitated. Obliteration of the aneurysm was performed by endovascular occlusion of the ICA with Guglielmi detachable coils and fibered platinum coils. For the second patient, the aneurysm was treated by deploying a self-expandable stent across the aneurysm neck. In an emergency situation, ruptured petrous ICA aneurysm can be treated with endovascular occlusion of the ICA with microcoils if there is a good collateral blood flow. Alternatively, the aneurysm can be treated by deployment of a stent, which can induce stasis and eventual thrombosis of the aneurysm.
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ranking = 12
keywords = aneurysm
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4/24. Infectious aneurysm clipping by an MRI/MRA wand-guided protocol. A case report and technical note.

    Infectious aneurysms are potentially deadly sequelae of multiple etiologies, typically associated with subacute bacterial endocarditis (SBE). Since these aneurysms tend to be distal, there are no consistent landmarks by which to localize them, in contrast to more typical aneurysms that occur on the circle of Willis or proximal, large cerebral vessel bifurcations. In addition, they tend to be extremely friable and may be obscured by blood if intracranial hemorrhage (ICH) has already occurred. These factors make clipping these aneurysms technically difficult, and searching for easily ruptured aneurysms without standard landmarks adds risk to the procedure. In this report, we describe the case of a 9-year-old boy with SBE and subsequent ICH secondary to a mycotic aneurysm. This aneurysm was localized to within millimeters by the MRI protocol described herein. The aneurysm was excised and the patient recovered without incident. Thus, MRI/MRA-guided frameless stereotaxy may be useful for localizing distal mycotic aneurysms, improving patient outcome by decreasing morbidity and mortality.
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ranking = 13
keywords = aneurysm
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5/24. Thrombolytics in infectious endocarditis associated myocardial infarction.

    The use of thrombolytics in the management of acute myocardial infarction in eligible patients is the accepted standard of practice. We present the case of an embolic myocardial infarction in the setting of acute infectious endocarditis, treated with thrombolytics, resulting in a massive intracerebral hemorrhage and the patient's death. Historical and current literature has shown a consistent and significant incidence of concurrent intracerebral mycotic aneurysms in the setting of infectious endocarditis. Despite this, a literature review of contraindications to the use of thrombolytics rarely recognizes endocarditis as a contraindication. It is imperative that the etiology for myocardial infarction be identified; if contraindications to thrombolytic treatment exist, alternative therapeutic interventions must be pursued. This case highlights the importance of the correct etiologic diagnosis of myocardial ischemia, and increases the awareness of the significant risks of intracerebral hemorrhage associated with the use of thrombolytics in the setting of endocarditis.
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ranking = 1
keywords = aneurysm
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6/24. Cerebellar haemorrhage after supratentorial aneurysm surgery with lumbar drainage.

    Haemorrhage within the posterior fossa (PF) after supratentorial surgery is a very rare and exceedingly dangerous complication. Only 28 cases were found in the literature. Up to now, no pathogenetic factor has decisively proven to be the cause of this phenomenon. We present clinical details of a patient operated on for aneurysm of the anterior communicating artery. Lumbar drainage was used during surgery, with the loss of a large amount of cerebrospinal fluid (200 ml). Other causes in our case which may have led to cerebellar shift or a critical increase in transmural venous pressure with subsequent vascular disruption and haemorrhage were extreme head rotation during lengthy surgery and blood pressure peaks in the early postoperative period. Repeated computed tomography (CT) allowed immediate diagnosis of this complication and control of its conservative management. After postponed ventriculoperitoneal shunt, the patient recovered completely.
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ranking = 5
keywords = aneurysm
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7/24. Successful surgical management of patients with infective endocarditis associated with acute neurologic deficits.

    Subjects were 2 patients with neurologic deficits due to infective endocarditis. The first, a 30-year-old woman with acute ischemic stroke, was found to have vegetation from infective endocarditis as the embolic source. Two weeks after she experienced an acute ischemic stroke, we conducted elective cardiac surgery. The second, a 16-year-old girl with infective endocarditis, suffered a ruptured mycotic aneurysm in the left carotid system complicated by intracranial hemorrhage. We conducted a successful staged mitral valve replacement following craniotomy.
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ranking = 1
keywords = aneurysm
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8/24. Mycotic aneurysm: an uncommon cause for intra-cranial hemorrhage.

    Intra-cranial mycotic aneurysms due to an infective process elsewhere in the body constitute an uncommon cause of intra-cranial hemorrhage. The condition carries a grave prognosis. Mycotic aneurysms secondary to infective endocarditis (IE) rarely occur in children. This communication describes a seven-year-old girl who presented with fever and neurological abnormalities. She was diagnosed to have a mycotic aneurysm secondary to IE. Digital subtraction angiography (DSA) confirmed the diagnosis, delineated anatomical details and later detected the complete resolution of the aneurysm following conservative management with intravenous antimicrobial agents.
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ranking = 8
keywords = aneurysm
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9/24. Ruptured pericallosal aneurysm causing hemorrhage along the fornix.

    We present a 57 year-old man with a pericallosal aneurysm causing parenchymal hemorrhage in the preseptal region of the frontal lobe with extension into the fornix. We briefly discuss the literature pertaining to ruptured pericallosal aneurysms and their bleeding patterns.
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ranking = 6
keywords = aneurysm
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10/24. Procedure-related haemorrhage in embolisation of intracranial aneurysms with Guglielmi detachable coils.

    We reviewed the haemorrhagic complications of the endovascular treatment of intracranial aneurysms, in terms of frequency, pre-embolisation clinical status, clinical and radiological manifestations, management and prognosis. In 275 patients treated for 303 aneurysms over 7 years we had seven (one man and six women--2.3%) with haemorrhage during or immediately after endovascular treatment. All procedures were performed with a standardised protocol of heparinisation and anaesthesia. Four had ruptured aneurysms, two at the tip of the basilar artery, and one ach on the internal carotid and posterior cerebral artery, treated after 12, 5, 14, and 2 days, respectively, three were in Hunt and Hess grade 2 and one in grade 1. Bleeding occurred during coiling in three, after placement of at least four coils, and during manipulation of the guidewire to enter the aneurysm in the fourth. Haemorrhage was manifest as extravasation of contrast medium, with a sudden rise in systolic blood pressure in three patients. The other three patients had unruptured aneurysms; they had stable blood pressure and angiographic findings during the procedure, but one, under sedation, had seizures immediately after insertion of four coils, and the other two had seizures, headache and vomiting on the day following the procedure. heparin reversal with protamine sulphate was started promptly started when bleeding was detected in four patients, and the embolisation was completed with additional coils in three. Emergency ventricular drainage was performed in the two patients with ruptured aneurysm and one with an unruptured aneurysm who had abnormal neurological responses or hydrocephalus. The bleeding caused a third nerve palsy in one patient, which might have been due to ischaemia and progressively improved.
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ranking = 11
keywords = aneurysm
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