نتایج جستجو برای: subdural haemorrhage

تعداد نتایج: 16871  

Journal: :British medical journal 1971
A N Guthkelch

Subdural haematoma is one of the commonest features of the battered child syndrome, yet by no means all the patients so affected have external marks of injury on the head. This suggests that in some cases repeated acceleration/deceleration rather than direct violence is the cause of the haemorrhage, the infant having been shaken rather than struck by its parent. Such an hypothesis might also ex...

Journal: :Trends Journal of Sciences Research 2021

Journal: :Archives of Disease in Childhood 2002

Journal: :Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery & Psychiatry 2003

Journal: :Neuropathology and applied neurobiology 2003
J F Geddes R C Tasker A K Hackshaw C D Nickols G G W Adams H L Whitwell I Scheimberg

A histological review of dura mater taken from a post-mortem series of 50 paediatric cases aged up to 5 months revealed fresh bleeding in the dura in 36/50, the bleeding ranging from small perivascular haemorrhages to extensive haemorrhage which had ruptured onto the surface of the dura. Severe hypoxia had been documented clinically in 27 of the 36 cases (75%). In a similar review of three infa...

Journal: :Journal of neurology, neurosurgery, and psychiatry 1987
A Page R M Paxton D Mohan

It has been increasingly recognised that patients with arachnoid cysts of the middle fossa appear more susceptible to the development of subdural haematomas. Seven patients with arachnoid cysts of the middle fossa and associated subdural haematomas are presented. Intra-cystic haemorrhage, masking the presence of an arachnoid cyst on computed tomography (CT) is highlighted. Repeat of CT scanning...

Journal: :Hippokratia 2008
P P Tsitsopoulos G C Pantazis E C Syrmou P D Tsitsopoulos

BACKGROUND Brain arachnoid cysts are fluid collections of developmental origin. They are commonly detected incidentally in patients imaged for unrelated symptoms. CASE DESCRIPTION A 15-year-old healthy boy with a recent history of head trauma experienced headache that gradually worsened over the course of 10 days. He underwent CT and MRI brain scans which revealed the presence of subdural hae...

Journal: :Journal of neurology, neurosurgery, and psychiatry 1970
N T Mathew J Abraham J Chandy

A case of Sturge-Weber disease treated with left hemispherectomy presented, 11 years later, with complications related to delayed intracranial haemorrhage. A loculation syndrome of the right lateral ventricle was detected and it was corrected by a ventriculoatrial shunt operation. The side of the hemispherectomy was evacuated of all the chronic products of haemorrhage, including the subdural me...

Journal: :Journal of neurology, neurosurgery, and psychiatry 2003
A A Rabinstein S J Pittock G M Miller J J Schindler E F M Wijdicks

Two patients with large bilateral subdural haematomas with patterns of non-enhanced brain computed tomography (CT) falsely suggesting coexistent subarachnoid haemorrhage are presented. The CT images showed marked effacement of the basal cisterns with hyperdense signal along the tentorium, sylvian fissure, and the perimesencephalic cisterns. In both cases, the suspicion of subarachnoid haemorrha...

Journal: :Developmental medicine and child neurology 2008
Daune L MacGregor

Shaken baby syndrome (SBS), characterized by the triad of subdural haemorrhage, retinal haemorrhage, and encephalopathy, was initially based on the hypothesis that shaking causes tearing of bridging veins and bilateral subdural bleeding. It remains controversial. New evidence since SBS was first defined three decades ago needs to be reviewed. Neuropathology shows that most cases do not have tra...

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