Ann Chir Thorac Cardiovasc
July 1977
The writers report on a new anatomical and clinical observation of Degos' disease with neurological complications. A highly fluctuating meningoencephalitic syndrome took place in a young man 17 years old with a fatal outcome in 2 months. It was a general examination which revealed the lesions of atrophic papulosis typical of the disease.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Radiol Electrol Med Nucl
December 1976
The authors report a case of cerebral gigantism and review 83 cases found in the world literature. The diagnosis depends on the association of several factors, none of which alone are specific but which, on the whole, form a fairly characteristic picture. Large size at birth, leading only rarely to gigantism at adult age.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTwo cases of tumoral isolated pulmonary cryptococcosis are reported. The rarity of the facts explains that diagnosis is usually surgical, the inflammatory and necrotic pseudo-tumour swarming with yeast-like micro-organisms, easily recognizable by their thick gelatinous capsules.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe consider our method with an inflatable and releasable balloon to be trustworthy and now applicable to the treatment of carotido-cavernous fistulas; it may not be possible in all cases to pass the ballon on through the fistula and inflate it in the cavernous sinus, but it seems to us so very important to preserve the carotid flow that we think that this should be achieved whenever possible. Certain arterial aneurysms could profit from this technique. We have purposely omitted all diagnostic application of the method which serbinenko has described in his article: selective opacifcation of certain branches of the internal carotid, deliberate temporary occlusion of certain branches to enable the amount of tolerance to be assessed.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe authors have perfected a technique making possible the percutaneous introduction of a balloon filled with hydrosoluble iodine and releasable, either in an arteriovenous fistula or in an aneurysm. Experimental jugulo-carotid fistulae and experimental aneurysms in the dog were treated in this way. The technique has been used in two human patients - one with a traumatic caverno-carotid fistula and the other with a complicated vertebral fistula.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe authors studied from several points of view 10 patients suffering from a neo-natal form of Steinert's disease. They analyse the variety of the family histories, of dysembryoplastic symptoms, of neo-natal difficulties and the subsequent impairment of mental development. They could not find any correlation between this latter evolution and the severity of the neurological damage, judged by the mentioned symptoms.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFExperimental carotid jugular fistulas have been created in dogs and at a later time obstructed with an inflatable and released balloon. Experimental carotid aneurysms in dogs have also been obstructed with the same procedure. This new technique allows the inflation and release of a balloon in an arteriovenous fistula or in an aneurysm.
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