A patient in her 60s presented to a district general hospital with headache, loss of consciousness, and vomiting. She was diagnosed with a subarachnoid haemorrhage secondary to an anterior communicating artery aneurysm and was transferred to a tertiary unit for coiling of the aneurysm under the neurosurgical team. She was intubated and had close observational monitoring, where it was noted that her oxygen saturations, obtained using finger-pulse oximetry, varied between 94% and 100%.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Pineal region tumours remain challenging neurosurgical pathologies.
Methods: Detailed anatomical knowledge of the posterior incisural space and its variations is critical. An opaque arachnoidal membrane seals the internal cerebral and basal veins, leading to thalamic, basal ganglia, mesencephalic/pontine infarctions if injured.