The anti-adhesion gel ADCON-L has been available since the end of the 1990s. During disc surgery it can be applied to the spinal nerve roots and the dura mater spinalis in order to inhibit fibroblast migration and thus avoid postoperative adhesions or excessive keloids, respectively. Due to the way ADCON-L works, inadvertent, intraoperational dural lesions may stay open much longer than usual because ADCON-L inhibits the natural healing process.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCerebral cavernous malformations (CCM) are common, mostly benign vascular anomalies of the CNS. Clinical features are seizures, headache and focal neurological signs. Often they are asymptomatic.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWernicke-Korsakow Syndrome (WKS) is caused by thiamine (vitamin B1) deficiency and usually occurs in conjunction with chronic alcohol abuse. Our report concerns a 64-year-old, nonalcoholic, woman with no history of alcohol abuse, who became ill with WKS after 3 weeks of parenteral nourishment. As an unusual initial symptom she went blind in both eyes; this was followed a few days later by impaired consciousness and spastic tetraparesis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe compared contrast enhancement on T1-weighted MRI of acute cerebral infarcts after conventional bolus administration and continuous infusion of gadolinium. We examined 12 patients with a history of acute stroke with contrast-enhanced MRI once a week for a 1 month. Only ischaemic lesions were investigated after cerebral haemorrhage had been excluded by CT.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe report a case of putaminal haemorrhage from a venous cerebral angioma following thrombosis in a draining vein. The patient complained of numbness of the right side, followed by headache and aphasia. CT demonstrated an intracerebral haemorrhage due to thrombotic occlusion of a draining vein of the venous angioma.
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