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BACKGROUND
Focal subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH) is often revealed by transient and recurrent focal neurological episodes. This cause is important to identify because it carries a high risk of intracerebral hemorrhage (ICH). We report the clinical, imaging and prognostic data of 17 patients with focal
Twenty patients were studied who developed central poststroke pain or paresthesia after lenticulocapsular hemorrhage. Pain or paresthesia occurred 0 to 24 months after the onset, more prominently in the leg than other body parts. The symptoms were described as numb, cold, burning, aching, swollen,
CONCLUSIONS
We described a case of chronic spinal cystic arachnoiditis after subarachnoid haemorrhage in a 54-year-old woman with a ruptured vertebral artery aneurysm treated by coils. At three months she complained of lumbar pain.At twelve months she presented lower limbs paresthesia then a rapidly
Numerous studies have shown that cavernous malformations may be localized in almost every region of the brain as well as in the spinal cord. Spinal cord cavernous malformations (SCCM) have been diagnosed more frequently since magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) has become more widely available. Most
A 66-year-old woman with primary Sjogren syndrome developed syringomyelia following two episodes of subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH) due to the rupture of basilar artery aneurysms. Gait disturbance and abnormal sensation with pain over the foot and abdomen appeared 3 years after the last SAH. Magnetic
The authors report on a 49-year-old man with a thoracic spinal dural arteriovenous shunt (dAVS) in which rupture of a varix caused intramedullary hemorrhage. In the literature, patients with a thoracic dAVS predominantly present with congestive myelopathy; however, the patient featured in this
A 52-year-old woman was admitted to the hospital with right thalamic hemorrhage. A carotid angiogram revealed occlusion of the terminal portions of the bilateral internal carotid arteries with basal moyamoya vessels, which was diagnosed as moyamoya disease (MMD). At 31 years of age, she was
Removal of third molars is a common surgical procedure with low complication rates. Localized alveolar osteitis, infection, bleeding, and paresthesia are the four most common postoperative complications of third molar extraction reported in the literature. Postoperative severe hemorrhages are rare
A case of exsanguinating perineal hemorrhage resulting from rupture of a pseudoaneurysm of the right internal pudendal artery is presented. Transcatheter embolization of Gelfoam and wire coils proved to be life saving, but subsequent neurologic sequelae developed, including loss of sensation over
OBJECTIVE
True aneurysms of the extracranial vertebral artery are rare. The usual pathogenesis of aneurysms in this location is either penetrating or blunt trauma with resultant pseudoaneurysm formation. We report a postpartum patient with a presumed traumatic pseudoaneurysm of the extracranial
A 19-year-old male presented with intraventricular hemorrhage manifesting as sudden onset of headache. Angiography showed mild stenotic changes in the distal internal carotid artery and proximal anterior cerebral artery only on the right. The anterior choroidal artery and lenticulostriate arteries
We report a non-hypertensive 23-year-old female with successive hemorrhages in parietal subcortical regions. She had first experienced a transient pain in the left upper extremity one month before admission. She noticed dysesthesia in the same limb and weakness on her left hand, and, five days
A 35 year-old man was admitted to our hospital because of cough, wheezing, and paresthesia of the right upper extremity. He demonstrated marked eosinophilia, bronchial asthma, and mononeuritis multiplex. We diagnosed Churg-Strauss syndrome. Serum MPO-ANCA was elevated to 189 U/ml. Chest
Context: Intrasyringal hemorrhage was first described in literature in the renowned Lectures on Diseases of the Nervous System by Sir William Richard Gowers [Gowers W. A lecture on syringal haemorrhage into the spinal cord. Lancet [Internet]; 162(4180):993-997. [cited 2019 August 19].
We describe a patient presenting with trochlear nerve palsy and segmental sensory disturbance due to circumscribed mesencephalic hemorrhage. A 36-year-old man with no past illness visited our hospital complaining of sudden onset of diplopia, dysesthesia of the left face and upper extremity, and