Cases reported "Intracranial Hypertension"

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1/4. rupture of a giant posterior inferior cerebellar artery aneurysm in an infant following a ventriculoperitoneal shunt--Case report.

    A 4-month-old female child presented with a huge posterior fossa mass lesion and severe hydrocephalus. Six hours after a ventriculoperitoneal shunt procedure, her condition worsened and she died. autopsy showed extensive intracranial hemorrhage due to rupture of a posterior inferior cerebellar artery aneurysm. The probable causes of the rupture of the aneurysm were mechanical effects or changes in cerebral blood flow.
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2/4. Giant supratentorial enterogenous cyst: report of a case, literature review, and discussion of pathogenesis.

    OBJECTIVE AND IMPORTANCE: To describe a histologically well-documented adult case of a giant supratentorial enterogenous cyst (EC). Fewer than 15 cases of supratentorial ECs are on record: 8 associated with the brain hemispheres or the overlying meninges, 4 with the sellar region, and 2 with the optic nerve. CLINICAL PRESENTATION: A 31-year-old woman complained of long-standing mild left brachial and crural motor deficit precipitated by headache and signs of intracranial hypertension. magnetic resonance imaging revealed a huge cyst overlying the frontoparietal brain. INTERVENTION: Symptoms were relieved by evacuation of the cyst content by means of a Rickam's reservoir, and the lesion was subsequently removed in toto. Histological and immunohistochemical examination of the cyst wall clearly established the enterogenous nature of its epithelium. Follow-up for up to 2 years after intervention showed no sign of recurrence, and symptoms, including treatment-resistant seizures in the postoperative period, have entirely subsided. CONCLUSION: Supratentorial ECs, distinctly rare in adult patients, may in some cases present as giant lesions. Total removal seems to be curative once careful examination has eliminated the possibility of a metastasis from an unknown primary. A correct histological diagnosis is important because, in contrast to other benign cysts of similar location and size, ECs may be prone to intraoperative dissemination.
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3/4. Obstructive hydrocephalus and intracranial hypertension caused by a giant macroprolactinoma. Prompt response to medical treatment.

    patients with large prolactin (PRL)-secreting pituitary adenoma often have symptoms due to varying degree of hypopituitarism and/or mass effect on visual structures, while presentation with hydrocephalus is extremely uncommon. Even more exceptional is the development of the syndrome of intracranial hypertension as a consequence of tumor obstruction of the cerebrospinal fluid circulation. In this report, we describe a 26-year-old man who was referred to the emergency department of our hospital because of headache, nausea, and vomiting. Clinical and radiological assessment led to the diagnosis of obstructive hydrocephalus caused by a giant macroprolactinoma. The patient received a temporary external ventricular drainage to relieve the symptoms of intracranial hypertension. The same day, after we received the result of the basal PRL level, medical treatment with cabergoline was initiated. A prompt response to the drug ensued with resolution of the obstructive hydrocephalus, which allowed removal of the external ventricular drainage. Initial shrinkage of the mass was already noted on a magnetic resonance imaging performed 12 days thereafter. Subsequent medical treatment led to progressive and marked shrinkage of the tumor. Eighteen months after presentation the patient was well while on cabergoline treatment and showed no symptom attributable to compression of the surrounding nervous structures. Our report confirms that, even in cases of giant sellar mass with neurological symptoms, a rapid hormonal evaluation is mandatory. If a macroprolactinoma is diagnosed, treatment with dopamine agonists can lead to prompt clinical amelioration and shrinkage of the tumor, with eventual resolution of neurological symptoms.
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4/4. Postencephalitic chronic granulomatous disease.

    This report details the evolution of a case of herpes simplex encephalitis to chronic granuloma in a 13-year old female who, at the age of 8, suffered herpes simplex virus type 1 encephalitis. Eight months later, she developed an intracranial hypertension syndrome with the onset of a new lesion in the necrosed zone of her right temporal lobe, with no viral presence in the cerebrospinal fluid. The histologic characteristics were those of chronic granuloma with multinucleated giant cells and calcifications. Initially treated for neurosarcoidosis, the patient remained steroid-dependent for 4 years and the steroids could only be withdrawn by treatment with Infliximab. This type of evolutive pattern has probably been completely overlooked until now; it can only be accurately diagnosed by biopsy. It was initially mistaken for neurosarcoidosis.
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