✓ An aneurysm of the anterior spinal artery associated with pseudoxanthoma elasticum is reported. This aneurysm was demonstrated by selective spinal angiography.
The authors report a case of cystic meningioma in a 10-month-old boy diagnosed by metrizamide ventriculography and computerized tomography. Intracranial meningioma in infants under 1 year old is extremely rare. This case is only the 16th case reported in the world literature; the other 15 cases are reviewed.
A 56-year-old female experienced sudden excruciating pain extending from the upper neck to the lower back. She had mild disturbance of consciousness, and a lumbar puncture revealed bloody cerebrospinal fluid. The positive neurological findings were meningitis, spastic paraparesis, hyperesthesia of the left L3 dermatome, bilateral Babinski, disappearance of anal reflex, and urinary retention. Computed tomography scans, myelography, and magnetic resonance images revealed diffuse subarachnoid hematoma and hematomyelia from Th12 to L3. Spinal angiography was tried twice before surgery but no origin of this diffuse hematoma could be found. Laminectomy was performed from Th12 to L1 and organized hematoma was found in the subarachnoid space. After the hematoma removal, non-pulsating tortuous vessels were observed on the surface of the spinal cord at the L1 level which ran into the intramedullary region. However, there was no further abnormality to define spinal arteriovenous malformation or fistula within the limits of exposure. The postoperative course was uneventful and about 2 months later she was able to walk by herself.
The intracapsular cholesterol, protein, and calcium contents of epidermoid and dermoid cysts from seven patients were compared with the signal intensities on T1-weighted spin-echo magnetic resonance (MR) images. All specimens had a paste-like consistency when resected. Epidermoid and dermoid cysts demonstrated a wide range of cholesterol and calcium contents, and epidermoid cysts were not always rich in cholesterol. Five patients had cysts with lower signal intensity than white matter, which contained more than 18.3 mg/g wet weight of protein. One of these patients had the highest cholesterol content of all seven patients (22.25 mg/g wet weight) and another had the highest calcium content (0.75 mg/g wet weight). Two patients had cysts with higher signal intensity than white matter, with protein contents of lower than 4.3 mg/g wet weight. High protein content (> 18.3 mg/g wet weight) may decrease signal intensity on T1-weighted MR images, while low protein content (< 4.3 mg/g wet weight) may increase signal intensity in epidermoid and dermoid cysts with high viscosity (paste-like consistency) contents.
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