Publications by authors named "Kany M"

Purpose: The Wada test is still the gold standard procedure to predict language and memory deficits before temporal lobe epilepsy surgery. As amobarbital was no longer available, our aim was to validate propofol as an alternative.

Method: We retrospectively studied 47 patients who underwent a bilateral intracarotid procedure, performed with amobarbital (18), or propofol (29), between 2000 and 2010 during the preoperative evaluation of temporal lobe epilepsy.

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Rhino-cerebral fungal infections are rare and difficult disorders to cure. We report the case of a woman presenting a left trigeminal neuralgia complicated by ophthalmoplegia and blindness. MRI demonstrated a lesion of the left orbital apex with extension into the cavernous sinus.

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Lymphocytic Hypophysitis is a rare autoimmune disease of the pituitary presenting mainly with features of a mass lesion and loss of pituitary function. Its course is quite unpredictable and its treatment is still controversial as experience in the field remains scarce. We describe a 45 year-old woman with a history of recurrent fever and meningeal symptoms who was referred 3 years later to our department for pituitary insufficiency.

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Introduction: The objective of our study was to discuss the valve of fine-needle aspiration cytology (FNAC) and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) in the diagnosis and treatment of parotid gland masses.

Materials And Methods: Forty patients were included in the prospective study. They had undergone clinical examination, FNAC and MRI before parotidectomy.

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Chronic hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection is quite prevalent in long-term hemodialysis (HD) patients. Patients who are candidates for renal transplantation might be treated, before grafting, with interferon-alpha (IFN-alpha). Among 39 HCV-positive long-term HD patients treated with IFN-alpha, we observed three cases of reversible posterior leukoencephalopathy syndrome (PLES).

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Mucoceles are the most common lesions causing expansion of the paranasal sinuses. The sinuses most commonly involved are, in decreasing order of frequency, frontal sinus, ethmoid sinuses, maxillary sinus and sphenoid sinus. We reviewed 46 cases of surgically proven mucoceles and the purpose of this study was to report five cases of mucoceles in an uncommon location.

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