J Neurosurg Pediatr
April 2013
We report a case of an aneurysm rupturing into an arachnoid cyst presenting as a confined intracystic hemorrhage. A 37-year-old man with a history of sporadic headaches for several years complained of a headache of several days' duration. Brain computed tomography and magnetic resonance imaging revealed a cystic lesion in the left side of the middle cranial fossa that included a 3-cm-diameter hematoma in the Sylvian fissure without extracystic hemorrhage.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAn 80-year-old male visited the hospital as an outpatient with a head injury sustained in a traffic accident. Brain computed tomography incidentally revealed a left frontal lobe tumor measuring 5 cm in a diameter. The patient had a history of taking chlormadinone acetate (a progesterone agonist) prescribed several years previously as treatment for benign prostatic hypertrophy.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObject: The authors have attempted to define the exact borders of the root exit zone (RExZ) of the facial nerve, measure the distribution of myelin histologically, and examine the relationship between contact vessels and the RExZ.
Methods: Seventy-five facial nerves were obtained from brainstems excised from 44 adult patients at autopsy. The arteries and veins associated with the facial nerve were counted and measured.