9 research outputs found
Late recurrent bleeding after surgical treatment for pituitary apoplexy
Pituitary apoplexy is an uncommon syndrome characterised by sudden onset of headache, meningeal signs, visual disturbances, ophthalmoplegia and confusion. Documented recurrent apoplexy or treated apoplexy is even rarer with only few reports in the literature. Between 1994 and 2001, 18 patients were treated for pituitary apoplexy at Bayindir Medical Centre through transsphenoidal route. In all, topical bromocriptine was applied after tumour resection as described by Ozgen. We hereby present the cases of two patients with recurrent apoplexy 3 and 7 years after the initial surgical treatment for pituitary adenoma with apoplexy. The patients were treated non-surgically with success. Additional treatment in the form of radiosurgery was found necessary for the first patient. Surgical excision of the pituitary tumours with apoplexy reduces the risk of recurrent bleedings but eradication is not a rule. These patients need to be followed closely in the postoperative period for possible recurrence of bleeding. © 2003 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved
Grisel's syndrome: A case of potentially lethal spinal cord injury in the adult
A 22-year-old woman presented with respiratory difficulty and quadriparesis two weeks after an upper respiratory tract intection. CT showed mild (Type I) rotatory atiantoaxial subluxation, but MRI demonstrated a severely contused and oedematous spinal cord at C2-3. The case was managed conservatively with collar, steroid and antibiotics. The outcome was excellent
Intraparenchymal meningioma
PubMedID: 15993076A 54 year-old woman presented with severe headache. Neuroimaging showed an enhancing intra-axial mass in the right superior temporal region associated with severe peritumoral oedema. Preliminary diagnosis was cerebral metastasis. The mass was surgically removed. Histopathology and immunohistochemistry showed the mass to be an intraparenchymal meningioma, which is rare. The relevant literature is reviewed. © 2005 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved
Conus ependymoma with holocord syringohydromyelia and syringobulbia
We report a 24-year-old woman with an intramedullary conus ependymoma associated with holocord syringohydromyelia and syringobulbia. The tumor was removed and surgery for decompression of the syringohydromyelia was not considered at the first operation. In the follow-up examinations, MRI showed significant and steady improvement of syringohydromyelia. Symptoms associated with syringohydromyelia also disappeared. The cause of syringohydromyelia accompanying intradural spinal cord tumors appears to be either direct blockade of the central canal or secondary interruption of the central canal flow by compression of the perimedullary cerebrospinal fluid flow. As removal of the mass often corrects both these likely causes of the syringohydromyelia, no additional treatment for the drainage of the hydromyelia cavity syrinx is usually necessary. © 2006 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved