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A hiccup is myoclonus of a sudden involuntary contraction of the diaphragm. Hiccups have various causes, and brain stem stroke is one of the causes of central hiccups. Certain types of hiccups are caused by diseases that can be fatal. Therefore, it is beneficial for physicians to be Trochlear nerve schwannoma without neurofibromatosis is extremely rare. To our knowledge, only 31 surgical cases have been reported to date, and only 2 cases of trochlear nerve schwannoma with intratumoral hemorrhage have been reported. None of those cases presented with persistent hiccups. We
A 52-year-old man was admitted to our hospital because of hypesthesia on the right side of his body. He had no medical history. On admission, he exhibited hypesthesia and disturbance of the touch and the vibratory sense on the right side of his body excluding the face. A brain T2* -weighted image
The report present a study of a case of a 38 year old man, suffering from massive haemorrhage from esophagus on the 21st day after performed laryngectomy. Serious difficulties occurred at first in specifying the exact sources of haemorrhage (cervical vessel, gastric ulcer?). The surgical assessment
BACKGROUND
Hiccups are defined as sudden-onset involuntary contractions of the diaphragm followed by immediate inspiration and laryngeal closure, and they are considered intractable if prolonged beyond 1 month. A reflux arc involving phrenic, vagal, and central midbrain modulation is likely
A case of intractable hiccup developed by cavernous hemangioma in the medulla oblongata is reported. There have been only five previously reported cases of medullary cavernoma that triggered intractable hiccup. The patient was a 28-year-old man who was presented with intractable hiccup for 15 days.
Background: Hypertrophic olivary degeneration (HOD) is a rare degenerative disorder that is thought to occur subsequent to a disruption of the dentate-rubro-olivary pathway.
Case:
BACKGROUND
Conus medullaris arteriovenous malformations (AVMs) are rare spinal vascular malformations presenting most frequently with features of myelopathy (Foix-Alajounine syndrome), radiculopathy, bowel/bladder dysfunction, or acute spinal hemorrhage (Coup de poignard of Michon) causing profound
We reported a 41-year-old male with paramedian thalamic and midbrain infarcts due to cerebral embolism from bilateral pulmonary arterio-venous fistula and primary medullary hemorrhage. The patient had an episode of sudden onset consciousness disturbance with left Weber's syndrome (right hemiplegia
We present an unusual case of a 44-year-old male who developed violent hiccups soon after a ureteroscopy for nephrolithiasis; later, the forceful hiccups were followed by hematemesis. Upper esophagogastroduodenoscopy revealed Mallory-Weiss tears and esophageal erosions in the lower esophagus.
Posterior condylar canal dural arteriovenous fistula (PCC dAVF) is a rare entity with only three cases having been reported so far in the English literature. We describe the clinical presentation, imaging, and endovascular management of an elderly man with left PCC dAVF presenting with subarachnoid