Publications by authors named "Yamataki A"

We report a case of a dissecting vertebral aneurysm with subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH) after ischemic onset on the same day. A 48-year-old man had abrupt vertigo and nausea. CT & MRI on admission showed no abnormality, but he complained of left hemiparesis after admission.

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The effects of an anti-siphon device (ASD) on shunt flow and intracranial pressure (ICP) in 16 children with hypertensive hydrocephalus were examined using quantitative radionuclide shuntography (99mTc) with the children in supine and sitting positions. The average age of these patients was 9.5 years.

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Intracranial fibrous xanthoma is extremely rare; only 11 cases have been reported so far. The authors report a case of multicentric intracranial fibrous xanthoma. Precontrast computed tomographic (CT) scans revealed a left frontal subdural mass, which had previously been diagnosed as a chronic subdural hematoma at another hospital.

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We encountered a patient with multiple stenotic lesions. He was treated by percutaneous transluminal angioplasty (PTA). The patient, a 59 year-old male, complained of right motor weakness.

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Osteogenesis imperfecta with infantile chronic subdural hematoma is extremely rare and has not been previously described in the literature. Our patient was a baby girl suffering from osteogenesis imperfecta tarda (Type I) who had an acute subdural hematoma at birth and who developed a progressive chronic subdural hematoma with local protrusion of the overlying skull. She was treated surgically with a good result.

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Acute spontaneous subdural hematoma of arterial origin is very rare. We have encountered two such cases and verified the arterial origin of the bleeding at operation. Both patients had no history of head trauma and developed progressive neurological deficits, becoming comatose.

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The authors report a case of subdural empyema that occurred 20 years after a severe closed head injury and was treated surgically with good results. Traumatic subdural empyema of this late onset is rare. The literature is reviewed, and the mechanism of a delayed presentation is discussed.

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A 36-year-old male with jugular foramen neurinoma was operated upon using a rotatable head holder, which enables the surgeon to rotate the patient's head at any time during the procedure and to gain access in multiple directions to the tumor. The tumor was situated primarily in the jugular foramen and showed partial extension into intracranial as well as into extracranial space. The patient was placed in the lateral position with a rotatable head holder, which allows rotation of the patient's head with the range of 10 degrees face up to 80 degrees face down from the horizontal plane.

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