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Cases reported "Brain Injuries"

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1/21. Emphysematous cystitis following brain contusion.

    Emphysematous cystitis is a rare disorder most commonly seen in patients with urinary tract infection and diabetes mellitus. We present a nondiabetic case of a 46-year-old woman with this entity following brain contusion.
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2/21. Early management of craniocerebral injury with avoidance of post-traumatic leptomeningeal cyst formation. Report of two cases.

    Leptomeningeal cyst, or growing skull fracture, is a rare complication of pediatric head trauma. This entity is typically diagnosed several weeks or months following head trauma when an enlarging scalp mass is recognized. Progressive neurologic deficits (seizures, paresis) can accompany this process, which typically do not improve following conventional surgical treatment. Given that radiographic findings are highly predictive of which children are likely to develop a leptomeningeal cyst, we have adopted a policy of early management in an effort to avoid difficult surgical dissections and progressive neurologic sequelae seen with delayed intervention. The cases of two infants with skull fractures are used to illustrate our approach toward early management of post-traumatic leptomeningeal cysts.
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3/21. Shaken infant syndrome: developmental neuropathology, progressive cortical dysplasia, and epilepsy.

    This study describes the developmental neuropathology of two infants who survived 7 and 9 years, respectively, an episode of violent shaking (shaken infant syndrome) early in their lives. The shaking injuries include cortical and subcortical contusions, hemorrhages, hypoxic/ischemic and axonal damage, and severe edema. The types, distribution, and resolution of these shaking injuries are detailed by sequential radiographic studies and by pathologic examination at postmortem. Despite their severity and extent, these injuries resolved in a relatively short period of time. By 6 months, the original injuries are repaired and the resultant encephaloclastic encephalopathies (e.g., multicystic encephalomalacia, porencephaly, generalized white matter attenuation, diffuse cortical atrophy, microgyria, ulegyria, and hydrocephalus ex vacuo) are well established. No appreciable pathologic differences are detected when radiographic findings at 6 months of age are compared to postmortem observations. On the other hand, undamaged and/or partially damaged cortical regions survive the original insult and undergo post-injury reorganization that transforms the residual cortex structural and presumably functional organization. Prominent features of this post-injury reorganization include progressive cortical dysplasia with cytoarchitectural disorganization, laminar obliteration, morphologic and functional (synaptic reorganization) transformation of some neurons, preservation of layer 1 intrinsic fibers and Cajal-Retzius cells, and the presence of large (hypertrophic) intrinsic neurons with intense neurofilament immunoreactivity. We propose that this progressive dysplastic process modifies the residual cortex structural and functional organization, influences the child's neurological and psychological maturation, and may play a significant role in the pathogenesis of ensuing neurological and/or psychological sequelae.
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4/21. Mid-gestation right basal ganglia lesion: clinical observations in two children.

    OBJECTIVE: To describe the neurobehavioral syndrome in two children with destruction of the right basal ganglia ostensibly from amniocentesis needle penetration at 17 weeks of gestation. BACKGROUND: Early-life unilateral lesions of the basal ganglia are rare and the resulting syndrome not described. methods: Both children had repeated clinical assessments, MRI and (18)F-fluorodeoxyglucose PET scans, and psychometric and achievement testing over 10 years. RESULTS: Right basal ganglia destruction was similar and virtually coextensive in both children; optic nerve and oculomotor dysfunction were disparate. One had a right temporal pole porencephalic cyst with anomalous overlying cortex. The clinical syndrome included left hemiparesis with distal spasticity and without hypotrophy; extraocular movement disorders; severe episodic disinhibition, impulsiveness, hitting reflexively, and extreme emotional lability. Outbursts of screaming and cursing resembled "sham rage." Both had mild intellectual retardation with competent language but poor nonverbal and visual-spatial abilities, visual memory, and daily living and socialization skills. CONCLUSIONS: The shared behavioral and cognitive syndrome is most reasonably attributed to the right basal ganglia lesions, which were complete and coextensive in both, whereas other lesions were partial, milder, and disparate. Early destruction of the right basal ganglia may preclude normal development of right hemisphere functions without evidence of plasticity and appears associated with intense disinhibition and impulsiveness of aggressive attack activities and with general lability and dyscontrol of emotion.
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5/21. Toxic epidermal necrolysis after phenytoin usage in a brain trauma patient.

    Toxic epidermal necrolysis is a drug-induced, rare, but life-threatening skin eruption. The main differential diagnoses are drug-induced erythema (hypersensitivity syndrome), acute graft-versus-host disease, staphylococcal scalded skin syndrome, and toxic shock syndrome. Because the therapy for toxic epidermal necrolysis and acute graft-versus-host disease differs largely from the others, it is necessary to make an accurate diagnosis. In addition to a detailed medical history, skin biopsy is mandatory because the skin eruptions are not always unequivocal. Discontinuation of the causing agent is crucial, and treatment in specialized intensive care units or burn units is supportive. Currently there is no specific treatment for toxic epidermal necrolysis. Advantages from corticosteroids, plasmapheresis, intravenous immunoglobulin, cyclophosphamide, cyclosporin, and N-acetylcysteine still remain to be established by controlled trials, or have failed to prove a benefit (thalidomide). The patient presented here demonstrates the difficulties in diagnosing toxic epidermal necrolysis in a critically ill patient. A short overview of the pathogenesis and the management of toxic epidermal necrolysis is provided.
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6/21. Biochemical markers of brain injury: could they be used as diagnostic adjuncts in cases of inflicted traumatic brain injury?

    child abuse is the leading cause of serious traumatic brain injury (TBI) in infants and young children (Billmire & Myers, 1985; Bruce & Zimmerman, 1989). The incidence of serious or fatal inflicted traumatic brain injury (iTBI) in children < 1 year of age is approximately 1 in 3,300 ( Keenan et al., 2003); since many cases of iTBI are of mild or moderate severity, the incidence is probably significantly higher. Even at an incidence of 1 in 3,300, iTBI is as common as the incidence of cystic fibrosis (CF), the most common genetic recessive disease in the Caucasian population. Proper diagnosis of iTBI is difficult even for experienced and astute physicians because its presentation can be subtle and important historical data are often lacking. As a result, misdiagnosis is common and can have catastrophic medical consequences for patients and significant financial consequences for society ( Ewing-Cobbs et al., 1998; Jenny, Hymel, Pitzen, Reinert, & Hay, 1999). Unlike CF for which there are several well established screening tests, there are currently no diagnostic adjuncts to help physicians screen for possible iTBI.
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7/21. Anterograde and retrograde amnesia in a person with bilateral fornix lesions following removal of a colloid cyst.

    AD, a 45-year-old man, presented with a severe and global anterograde amnesia following surgery for removal of a colloid cyst. Structural neuroimaging confirmed bilateral lesions to the fornix and a small lesion in the basal forebrain. Testing for remote episodic memory of autobiographical events, and for remote semantic memory of personal and public events, and of famous people, revealed that AD had a severe retrograde amnesia for autobiographical episodes that covered his entire lifetime, and a time-limited retrograde amnesia for semantic memory. Because the fornix and basal forebrain lesions disrupted major afferent and efferent pathways of the hippocampus, it was concluded that the integrity of the hippocampus and its projections are needed to retain and/or recover autobiographical memories no matter how old they are. By contrast, hippocampal contribution to semantic memory is time-limited. These findings were interpreted as consistent with Multiple Trace Theory, which holds that the hippocampal system is essential for recovering contextually rich memories no matter how old they are, but is not needed for recovering semantic memories.
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8/21. Massive hemorrhage in acoustic neurinoma after minor head trauma--case report.

    Massive hemorrhage within an intracranial neurinoma occurs rarely. The authors describe a 62-year-old female with intratumoral bleeding which led to the discovery of an acoustic neurinoma. She developed a gait disturbance after a minor head injury. A computed tomographic scan obtained 2 months later demonstrated multiple high-density areas in the anterior portion of the left cerebellopontine angle. Preoperative diagnosis was acoustic neurinoma. The tumor had multiple cysts which contained a mixture of xanthochromic fluid and old, brownish hematomas, and was successfully removed. The intratumoral hemorrhage is thought to have resulted from traumatic rupture of the dilated vessels, although the trauma was slight. This is the first reported case of an acoustic neurinoma discovered through treatment for intratumoral hemorrhage occurring after a minor head injury.
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9/21. On the management of neonatal tentorial damage. Eight case reports and a review of the literature.

    From the history of 15 personal patients--8 reported here in extenso--and from 63 patients in the literature with the diagnosis of posterior fossa subdural haemorrhage during life, we discuss the possibility of detecting tentorial damage on computed tomography (CT) and ultrasound (US) scan. The association of a (peri)cerebellar haemorrhage with peritentorial bleeding around the straight sinus and a subdural haemorrhage between both occipital cerebral lobes is suggestive of tentorial laceration(s). Both coronal CT scan and sagittal US scan are very helpful in locating these haemorrhages near the falco-tentorial junction. The conservative management of one of our infants with very extensive but asymmetric posterior fossa haemorrhage, leading to resorptive hydrocephalus, is compared with both surgical and conservative treatment of patients from the literature. Two reasons that warrant neurosurgical intervention are: life-threatening brain-stem compression--as in one of our own patients--and acute obstructive hydrocephalus. craniotomy of the posterior fossa within the neonatal period does not prevent later-onset resorptive hydrocephalus. The communicating nature of this latter process is adequately demonstrated by lumbar isotope cisternography. Finally, neonatal posterior fossa subdural haemorrhage is one of the many causes of cyst-like structures behind the cerebellum.
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10/21. Malignization of an arachnoid cyst.

    A case of evolvement of fibrosarcoma from a supratentorial arachnoid cyst (verified in surgery five years before) is presented, with brief comments on the embryonic origin of the tissues involved.
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Last update: April 2009
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