2 results match your criteria: "Institute for Neuroradiology University Hospital of Zurich[Affiliation]"
Neuroradiol J
December 2015
Institute for Neuroradiology University Hospital of Zurich, Switzerland.
Bilateral thalamic glioma is one of the rarest tumor occurrences, representing a small fraction of thalamic gliomas, which only accounts for 1-1.5% of all brain tumors. It is usually a diffuse, low-grade astrocytoma (WHO grade II), seen mainly in adults, with approximately 25% of them involving children under the age of 15.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInterv Neuroradiol
March 2006
Institute for Neuroradiology University Hospital of Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland.
In a child undergoing combined transarterial and direct percutaneous puncture embolization of an extensive and complex facial arteriovenous malformation, severe arterial spasm fixed a flow-directed microcatheter in an ethmoidal branch of the left ophthalmic artery. Multiple traction attempts failed to remove the microcatheter. After catheterization of the distal, post central retinal artery part of the same ophthalmic artery, with a second flow-directed microcatheter and following intraarterial papaverine injection through this second microcatheter, the fixed microcatheter could be removed without complication.
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