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1/75. Resection of primary brachial plexus tumor using a modified Dartevelle anterior approach.

    We treated a patient with a large supraclavicular mass with associated parasthesia of the affected extremity. The mass was removed operatively using a supraclavicular Dartevelle approach.
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keywords = plexus
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2/75. Axillary schwannoma masquerading as cervical radiculopathy.

    A 58-year-old woman, suffering from radicular-like pain in the left arm for 3 years, presented an entirely negative cervical imaging. Careful clinical examination disclosed Tinel's sign in the axilla. This clinical finding led to further investigation of this region. Computed tomography and magnetic resonance imaging disclosed a small tumour highly suggestive of a schwannoma. Surgical exploration and microscopic examination confirmed a diagnosis of schwannoma located on the radial trunk of the left brachial plexus. After tumour excision, the patient had immediate relief of pain without sensitive or motor sequelae. No recurrence has been observed after 3 years.
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keywords = plexus
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3/75. Primary non-Hodgkin's lymphoma of brachial plexus.

    We report the case of a 65-year-old man with non-Hodgkin's lymphoma (NHL) not only in the brachial plexus but also in the central nervous system and parotid gland. He was referred to our hospital for evaluation of a right parotid mass. He also presented with bilateral facial palsy and paralysis of the left superior limb. Computed tomography scan and magnetic resonance imaging revealed mass lesions in the right parapharyngeal space, the deep lobe of the right parotid gland. and the left brachial plexus. A gallium-67 citrate scan demonstrated abnormal uptake in the left brachial plexus. These symptoms and lesions improved during steroid therapy. However, the symptoms worsened again after steroid therapy was discontinued. We performed a right parotidectomy to confirm the diagnosis. Histopathological study revealed NHL. He was treated with combination chemotherapy, and most of the lesions and symptoms, except bilateral facial palsy, improved. Despite follow-up treatment, a brain metastasis occured, and he died 16 months after the onset of symptoms.
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ranking = 1.75
keywords = plexus
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4/75. Pulmonary thromboembolism after spinal instrumentation surgery.

    A 57-year-old woman was hospitalized because of gait disturbance and dysuria. Close examination revealed a cauda equina tumor at the level of L2 and L3. Tumor resection was performed, with posterolateral fusion and spinal instrumentation. On the eleventh day after the surgery, she experienced dyspnea and chest pain during standing and walking exercise. Pulmonary thromboembolism was diagnosed, based on: (1) blood gas analysis findings of hypoxemia and (2) defective images in both of the upper lobes on urgent pulmonary blood flow scintigram. Her clinical status improved with urgent thrombolytic therapy (with tisokinase and urokinase) and anticoagulation therapy (with heparin and warfarin), and her life was saved. When pulmonary thromboembolism occurs, early diagnosis by pulmonary blood flow scintigram and early thrombolytic and anticoagulative therapies are necessary. Special attention should be paid to symptoms of pulmonary thromboembolism in patients after spinal surgery.
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ranking = 0.00046973350410899
keywords = chest
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5/75. Neurinomas of the brachial plexus: case report.

    Neurinomas, also referred to as neurilemmomas and schwannomas, are rare benign tumours of the peripheral nerves, a low proportion of which arise from the brachial plexus. Authors report a case of an ancient schwannoma arising from the brachial plexus. The tumour, usually asymptomatic, may cause sensory radicular symptoms, or rarely motor deficits in the involved arm. Enucleation of the tumour from the nerve without damage to any of the fascicles is the correct treatment.
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ranking = 1.5
keywords = plexus
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6/75. Great auricular nerve: anatomy and imaging in a case of perineural tumor spread.

    We present the imaging and clinical findings of a case of recurrent cutaneous squamous cell carcinoma of the face in which CT and MR imaging revealed perineural tumor spread along the great auricular nerve. The great auricular nerve is a superficial cutaneous branch of the cervical plexus, providing sensory innervation to the skin of the parotid and periauricular region. Our purpose was to familiarize the reader with the anatomy of this nerve and imaging's potential role in the diagnosis of perineural tumor spread along this seldom seen structure.
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ranking = 0.25
keywords = plexus
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7/75. Neoplasm as a cause of brachial plexus palsy in neonates.

    Two patients with neonatal onset of arm weakness resulting from neoplastic involvement of the brachial plexus who were initially considered to have obstetric brachial plexus palsies are reported. The first patient was a 7-day-old female who presented with a left supraclavicular mass that was first detected at 2 days of age and left proximal arm weakness. The weakness involved the whole arm within 3 days. The mass was a malignant rhabdoid tumor. The second patient was a 28-month-old male who presented with slowly progressive right arm weakness, which began at 3 weeks of age, and episodes of scratch marks on the arm that began at 4 months of age. magnetic resonance imaging revealed a plexiform neurofibroma of the brachial plexus. The features that are suggestive of a brachial plexus palsy caused by a neoplasm rather than of obstetric brachial plexus palsy include the following: the onset of weakness after the first day of age, with a progressive course; a history of a normal delivery and birth weight; the absence of signs of a traumatic injury or injuries; the appearance before 7 days of age of a growing supraclavicular mass without radiographic evidence of a clavicular fracture; and recurrent scratch marks on the weak arm.
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ranking = 2.25
keywords = plexus
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8/75. A rapidly growing benign intrathoracic neurofibroma after lung lobectomy.

    A 67-year-old male underwent a right upper lung lobectomy for lung cancer in January 1993. Follow-up chest x-rays revealed a progressive and rapidly growing intrathoracic mass in the right thorax. The mass, however, did not resemble a tumor recurrence, and the patient complained only of shortness of breath. Computerized tomography and magnetic resonance imaging confirmed the presence of the intrathoracic mass and its associated compression of the residual lung. A right thoracotomy was performed in January 1998, and a mass found arising from the sympathetic nerve trunk was resected. Microscopic examination revealed stellate or spindle-shaped cells in myxoid stroma with sparsely distributed collagen fibers. Immunohistochemically, the cells were positive for neuron-specific enolase, and the tumor was identified as neurofibroma. The patient did not suffer from von Recklinghausen's disease, and there was no family history of the disease. After resection of the neurofibroma, the compressed lung was able to re-expand, and the patient's shortness of breath disappeared. At one year postoperative, the patient remains well, and there is no evidence of recurrence.
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ranking = 0.00046973350410899
keywords = chest
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9/75. brachial plexus neuropathy as unusual onset of diffuse neurolymphomatosis.

    We present a patient with a large B cell gastric lymphoma in total remission who, after 4 months, developed a fatal progressive peripheral neuropathy with an unusual early involvement of the right brachial plexus. No evidence of lymphoma was found at whole body computed tomography, magnetic resonance imaging of the head, cervical spine and right brachial plexus, bone marrow biopsy or repeated lumbar punctures. The diagnosis of neurolymphomatosis was made only at postmortem examination.
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ranking = 1.5
keywords = plexus
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10/75. Intraneural nerve metastasis with multiple mononeuropathies.

    Although cancer is a frequent condition, neoplastic involvement of the peripheral nervous system is rare. The mechanisms are heterogeneous and include lesions within the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) space, local invasion (e.g. brachial plexus), compression, rarely direct infiltration, perineurial spread and even rarer intranerval metastasis. A 47-year-old woman had been treated for a carcinoid 10 years earlier and had received axillar irradiation. At presentation she suffered from weakness of the biceps brachii and was experiencing pain radiating from the axilla into the forearm and thumb. MR scans of the brachial plexus were negative and her symptoms were primarily considered to stem from a postradiation brachial plexopathy, Because of increasing pain, the brachial plexus was explored and a metastasis in the left musculocutaneous nerve was resected. Several months later, numbness and pain appeared in the ulnar nerve and another intrafascicular metastasis in the ulnar nerve was discovered. Resection with preservation of remaining fascicles was performed. This rare case report demonstrates that multiple mononeuropathies, resembling multiplex neuropathy, may be caused by intranerval metastasis.
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ranking = 0.75
keywords = plexus
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