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1/166. pituitary apoplexy after cardiac surgery presenting as deep coma with dilated pupils.

    Acute clinical deterioration due to infarction or haemorrhage of an existing, often previously unrecognized, pituitary tumour is a rare but well-described complication. It can occur spontaneously or may be caused e.g. by mechanical ventilation, infection or surgical procedures. We report on a case of pituitary apoplexy occurring in a 64-year-old patient 3 weeks after cardiac surgery. The patient presented with deep coma and dilated pupils. magnetic resonance imaging revealed a haemorrhagic pituitary tumour. After prompt endocrinologic replacement therapy with levothyroxine and hydrocortisone the patient regained consciousness. Neurological examination revealed right oculomotor nerve palsy and bilateral cranial nerve VI palsy. Subsequent trans-sphenoidal removal of a nonfunctional macroadenoma with large necrotic areas was performed. The patient recovered completely. To our knowledge, pituitary tumours presenting with a combination of deep coma and dilated pupils must be considered exceedingly rare. Possible pathophysiologic mechanisms are discussed. As our case illustrates, even in severe cases complete recovery is possible if the diagnosis is suspected, and diagnostic and therapeutic measures are initiated in time.
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ranking = 1
keywords = haemorrhage
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2/166. Carotid ligation for carotid aneurysms.

    Thirty patients with subarachnoid haemorrhage due to rupture of a carotid aneurysm were treated by ligation of the common carotid artery. Two patients died as a result of the procedure, two patients developed persisting hemisphere deficit. Eight of the ten patients who developed cerebral ischemia after the operation were operated within ten days after the bleeding. At present out aim is to guide the patient safely through the first ten days after his haemorrhage and perform ligation at the end of the second week. After a follow up period of 1-8 years recurrent haemorrhage did not occur. Common carotid ligation, preferably with control of carotid artery end pressure, cerebral blood-flow and EEG is considered to be a valuable method to treat ruptured intracranial carotid aneurysm.
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ranking = 3
keywords = haemorrhage
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3/166. Neuro-ophthalmic complication after maxillary surgery.

    We report an unusual case of ophthalmoplegia after maxillofacial surgery. A thirteen year old girl with unilateral left cleft lip and palate underwent maxillary advancement by distraction osteogenesis. Postoperatively she developed diplopia. The diplopia was not due to orbital lesions, most often seen after maxillofacial surgery, but to a haemorrhage posterior to the cavernous sinus.
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ranking = 1
keywords = haemorrhage
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4/166. Postbulbar duodenal ulcer.

    Postbulbar duodenal ulceration is not common, but when present is difficult to diagnose and treat. Between January 1965 and September 1971, 1,080 patients with duodenal ulcers were treated surgically at St James Hospital. Forty-one ulcers were found at operation to lie distal to the duodenal bulb. pain was the most common indication for surgery. In six-patients it was clinically indistinguishable from biliary pain, giving rise to diagnostic difficulty. Twelve patients (29%) presented with haemorrhage, a percentage similar to the 25% of bulbar ulcers presenting with this complication over the period of this study. This is contrary to the finding in most other series, that postbulbar ulceration is more frequently complicated by haemorrhage than is bulbar ulceration. Perforation and stenosis are uncommon complications. Postbulbar ulceration is easily overlooked in conventional barium studies. Only one-third of the patients subjected to barium meal x-ray examination had their ulcers identified in the first study. In a further third the presence of an ulcer was suspected, and the remainder required multiple investigations for undiagnosed symptoms before the condition was demonstrated. duodenoscopy was not performed in a sufficient number of patients for its value to be assessed, but other reports indicate that it should be a valuable manoeuvre. The technical difficulties and potential hazards of Polya gastrectomy are discussed and special reference is made to the surgical management of bleeding postbulbar ulcers.
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ranking = 2
keywords = haemorrhage
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5/166. Haematemesis and Melaena: surgical management.

    A prospective study of the surgical management of 100 consecutive patients with benign, non-variceal upper gastrointestinal bleeding is presented. The manner of presentation, precipitating factors, investigations and associated medical problems are discussed. Chronic duodenal ulceration was the most common cause of haemorrhage. vagotomy and drainage with oversewing or excision of the bleeding ulcer was the surgical procedure performed in 71 of the patients in the series. The incidence of recurrent bleeding was 7%; no patient in this category required further operation. The mortality rate was 6%, and there were no deaths recorded in the patients who underwent vagotomy and drainage. The reasons for the relatively low surgical mortality are discussed.
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ranking = 1
keywords = haemorrhage
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6/166. Posterior-fossa haemorrhage after supratentorial surgery--report of three cases and review of the literature.

    We present clinical details of three patients with posterior fossa haemorrhage after supratentorial surgery and discuss possible pathomechanisms of this rare complication. All patients were males of advanced age. Two patients presented with a history of hypertension. In all patients the occurrence of haemorrhage was associated with loss/removal of large amounts of cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) either intra-operatively (one patient undergoing aneurysm surgery) or postoperatively (all three patients: drainage of subdural hygromas or chronic subdural haematomas in two, external ventricular drainage in one patient). Treatment consisted in haematoma evacuation and/or external ventricular drainage. Two patients died, one patient recovered completely. Although haematomas distant from a craniotomy site are a well known entity, a review of the literature identified only 25 published cases of posterior fossa haemorrhage after supratentorial procedures in the CT era. Most often disturbances of coagulation, positioning of the patient and episodes of hypertension have been associated with this complication. Only one author described the occurrence of a haemorrhage after drainage of a supratentorial hygroma. We suggest that the loss of large amounts of CSF intra-operatively and post-operatively may lead to parenchymal shifts or a critical increase of transmural venous pressure with subsequent vascular disruption and haemorrhage.
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ranking = 9
keywords = haemorrhage
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7/166. Intraoesophageal rupture of a thoracic aortic aneurysm.

    The intraoesophageal rupture of a large thoracic aortic aneurysm is reported in a 49 year old man. He had been hypertensive for some years while the aneurysm increased in size. Although a graft was successfully inserted to repair the leak, infection from the oesophagus with candida albicans, subsequently led to secondary haemorrhage and death 17 days later. A plea is made for the earlier referral of patients with aneurysm prior to rupture, as the operative mortality rises markedly after rupture has occurred and in this case the situation was virtually irreparable.
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ranking = 1
keywords = haemorrhage
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8/166. Haemorrhagic complication after total extirpation of huge arteriovenous malformations.

    Two cases with huge arteriovenous malformations (AVMs) who developed haemorrhagic complications after surgery are described. The cause of the postoperative haemorrhage was considered to be the normal perfusion pressure breakthrough phenomenon and/or occlusive hyperaemia. These two haemodynamic insults possibly occur simultaneously and induce life-threatening haemorrhage. It was concluded that a huge high-flow AVM with a large venous ampulla in its deep drainers has a high risk of a postoperative intravenous thrombosis, resulting in haemorrhage together with normal perfusion pressure breakthrough phenomenon.
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ranking = 3
keywords = haemorrhage
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9/166. Surgical resection of cerebral arteriovenous malformation combined with pre-operative embolisation.

    To assess the importance of pre-operative embolisation, 27 cases of cerebral artriovenous malformation (AVM) treated in this institute between July 1994 and October 1998 were analysed. The patients' ages ranged from 3 to 70 years (average 36.9) with a follow-up period of 1-41 months (average 19.2). The patient presented with haemorrhage in 21 cases and seizure in five. In 21 of 27 cases, surgical resection of a nidus was performed, gamma knife therapy was applied in three and conservative therapy was chosen in three. Of 21 cases treated surgically, total removal was achieved in 19 cases and a residual nidus was seen in one (a large basal ganglia AVM). In the remaining case, postoperative angiography was not available. Pre-operative embolisation followed by surgical resection of the nidus was performed in seven cases in which there was a large AVM. A volume index was calculated to indicate the size of the nidus using X x Y x Z, where X is the maximum diameter (cm) of the nidus on the lateral angiogram, Y is the diameter (cm) perpendicular to X and Z is the maximum diameter (cm) on the anteroposter or angiogram. The index averaged 45.9 for the cases in which pre-operative embolisation was performed, while it was 5.6 in the cases without embolisation. Pre-operative embolisation was performed to reduce the nidus flow as much as possible, to prevent overload to the surrounding structures. At surgery, the nidus was resected from the surrounding tissue and care was taken not to enter the nidus. Postoperatively, the systolic blood pressure was maintained at 90-100 mmHg for several days in the intensive care unit. The results were excellent in 15 cases, good in three (hemiparesis due to the initial haemorrhage remained in all three), fair in one (a patient with a severe subarachnoid haemorrhage). Two patients died (acute pulmonary oedema and severe meningitis). Minor postoperative bleeding or oozing was seen in three cases. In conclusion, reducing the shunt flow through a nidus in a step-wise fashion with pre-operative embolisation of a large AVM seems to be quite helpful in preventing postoperative haemodynamic overload to the surrounding brain. It is also important not to enter the nidus when it is removed at surgery. This helps to prevent intraoperative and/or postoperative bleeding, and led to successful total removal of the nidus with a good postoperative course.
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ranking = 3
keywords = haemorrhage
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10/166. Fatal tumoural haemorrhage following decompressive craniectomy: a report of three cases.

    Three cases of large and deep seated anaplastic cerebral glioma were treated by bone and dural decompression. The patients worsened suddenly within 12 h of surgery and later died. Postmortem examination revealed a large intratumoural clot in each case. The effects of decompression and the probable causes of fatal bleeding are analysed in this report.
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ranking = 4
keywords = haemorrhage
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