Increased levels of lipid peroxides measured in the CSF during the acute stage of SAH were predictive of both symptomatic vasospasm and poor outcome. Measurements of lipid peroxides in the CSF may be useful prognostically for patient outcomes as well as for predicting symptomatic vasospasm.
A 78-year-old female presented with a nontraumatic acute subdural hematoma (ASDH) caused by hemorrhage from a cavernous angioma located on the convexity dura mater. The hematoma and angioma were removed successfully. Neuroimaging performed 2 years previously had not revealed cavernous angioma. The angioma most likely grew rapidly over the 2 year period, during which she had received oral antiplatelet medication. Nontraumatic ASDH may originate from a cavernous angioma which grows rapidly.
A 70-year-old female presented with symptoms of right-sided trigeminal neuralgia. Computed tomography showed a high-density mass in the prepontine cistern without enhancement. Magnetic resonance (MR) imaging showed the mass as heterogeneous with variable but largely high-signal intensity on T1-weighted images and low-signal intensity on T2-weighted images. At surgery, the lesion was found to be an epidermoid cyst filled with old blood and lipid debris. The high-signal intensity on the T1-weighted images may reflect lipid or methemoglobin with the low intensity on T2-weighted images representing hemosiderin. Most intracranial epidermoid cysts appear as low-intensity lesions on T1-weighted images and high-signal intensity on T2-weighted images. Typical MR imaging findings are neither specific for nor constant with epidermoid cysts, requiring critical differential diagnosis.
Cold sensation and numbness have been reported as post-stroke sensory sequelae attributable to distal axonopathy, which is caused by chronic ischemia of diseased limbs resulting from dysfunction of vasomotor regulatory systems. Keishibukuryogan is a traditional herbal medicine used to treat symptoms of peripheral ischemia such as cold extremities. This study investigated clinical improvement and skin temperature in peripheral ischemia patients to determine the efficacy of keishibukuryogan in alleviating post-stroke cold sensation and numbness. Twenty-two stroke patients with cold sensation and/or numbness were enrolled in this study. Subjective cold sensation and numbness, evaluated using the visual analogue scale, were found in 21 and 31 limbs, respectively. The skin temperature of diseased and healthy limbs was recorded. We observed all patients for 4 weeks and 17 patients for 8 weeks after administration of keishibukuryogan. The skin temperature of diseased limbs was significantly higher than baseline at 4 weeks and 8 weeks, whereas that of healthy limbs did not change significantly. Cold sensation and numbness were significantly improved at 4 weeks and 8 weeks compared to baseline. Keishibukuryogan administration resulted in warming of diseased limbs and improved cold sensation and numbness, probably by increasing peripheral blood flow.
We devised a linear discriminant function to predict the outcome for patients with acute subdural hematoma (ASDH) based on a consecutive series of 170 ASDH cases with mild to severe head injury [Glasgow Coma Scale (GCS) 3-15]. Functional recovery was achieved in 50.0% of patients and the mortality was 36.5%. The relationship between initial clinical and radiological signs and the outcome 3 months after admission was studied retrospectively by Mann-Whitney's U-test and Pearson's chi-squared test. Fourteen factors (GCS, pupillary response, motor paresis, age, hematoma volume and thickness, midline shift, association with cerebral contusion and subarachnoid hemorrhage, obliteration of the basal, ambient, or quadrigeminal cistern on computed tomography, fibrin-fibrinogen degradation product level, and intracranial pressure) were found to correlate significantly (p < 0.01) with outcome. Linear discriminant functions were formulated by multivariate analysis to investigate the relationship between these factors and recovery or poor prognosis. The following formula was obtained: Z = -0.110 + 0.013 (Age) - 0.108 (GCS) + 0.397 (Eye) + 0.003 (Shift) + 0.268 (Ambient). Functional recovery could be predicted by a negative Z value, with an accuracy of 90.59%. This simple discriminant function is useful for predicting the outcome of ASDH.
An 87-year-old woman presented with an atypical case of acute subdural hematoma (ASDH) manifesting as disturbance of consciousness and left hemiparesis. Computed tomography revealed a high density lentiform lesion in the right convexity, which was thought to be acute epidural hematoma preoperatively. Emergent decompressive craniotomy revealed an encapsulated solid fresh clot in the subdural space and a bleeding small cortical artery under the clot. The arachnoid membrane and the brain parenchyma were intact, and no other abnormal feature such as aneurysm or arteriovenous malformation was observed. The encapsulated ASDH was removed en bloc and the patient fully recovered. Histological examination confirmed that both the outer thicker and the inner membrane were fibrinous single structures without vasculature. The red blood cells constituting the clot in the capsule maintained their cell structure. The reported pathological mechanisms of lentiform ASDH are adhesion of the arachnoid membrane and the dura mater or intracapsular bleeding from sinusoidal vessels in the outer membrane of the chronic subdural hematoma. However, in our case, the arachnoid membrane had not adhered to the dura mater and the capsule was a fibrinous single structural membrane without vasculature, which probably resulted from a previous hematoma due to initial bleeding from the cortical artery. The possible mechanism in our case was that the re-bleeding dissected and flowed into the fibrinous single structural membrane, resulting in formation of the lentiform ASDH.
This report is the first to describe a case of a ruptured aneurysm arising from the ophthalmic artery trunk. We discuss the clinical significance of an aneurysm at this site, as well as the role of three-dimensional rotational angiography in determining the source of subarachnoid hemorrhage.
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