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Query: UMLS:C0014118 (
endocarditis
)
15,629
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A patient who suffered acute subdural hematoma secondary to rupture of intracranial aneurysm is reported. Cerebral angiography showed a subdural collection on the left hemisphere and a distal middle
cerebral artery aneurysm
. There was no history of head trauma,
endocarditis
or systemic infection, and physical examination was normal. Congenital etiology is presupposed. From our review of the literature this is a rare association. The author emphasizes on the continuing role of angiography to evaluate spontaneous subdural hematomas.
...
PMID:[Acute subdural hematoma caused by rupture of a peripheral aneurysm of the sylvian artery]. 344 89
A patient with multiple mycotic aneurysms associated with infective
endocarditis
is reported. A 45-year-old man was admitted on February 16, 2001 under the diagnosis of infective
endocarditis
. After alpha-streptococcus was identified by a blood culture, he was treated with high doses of antibiotics. However, 2 weeks after admission, he suddenly suffered from headache and mild left hemiparesis. A CT showed a parenchymal hematoma in the right parietal lobe. Cerebral angiography demonstrated aneurysms of the bilateral middle cerebral artery and the left posterior cerebral artery. At first, we trapped and resected the ruptured right middle cerebral aneurysm. After the surgery, we tried to treat two unruptured aneurysms by endovascular treatment. During the provocation test for the posterior cerebral artery, the arterial wall was perforated by a guide wire. The parent artery was occluded by coils at this site. Although the aneurysm was still filled by retrograde blood flow, it finally disappeared six months after treatment. The left middle
cerebral artery aneurysm
could not be treated because the provocation test showed cognitive deficits. The patient recovered from infective
endocarditis
after four-months of antibiotic therapy; and the unruptured aneurysm had not changed in size for 11 months. Recently, the outcome of patients with intracranial mycotic aneurysm is improved by development of multimodality management. Especially, endovascular therapy may become an effective treatment for unruptured aneurysms, but it is necessary to take risks, such as arterial perforation into consideration.
...
PMID:[A case of multiple mycotic intracranial aneurysms]. 1253 8
The authors evaluated various clinical courses of ruptured infectious cerebral aneurysms associated with infective
endocarditis
in 4 patients. The first case: A 60-year-old male, who had a large hematoma resulting from rupture of a distal anterior
cerebral artery aneurysm
at the left frontal lobe co-existing with cerebral infarction at the right temporo-occipital lobe, with complications of renal and liver embolisms and pyogenic spondylitis, was treated with antibiotic therapy. However, he died of rupture of another newly formed aneurysm 29 days after onset. The second case: A 71-year-old female presented cerebral infarction in the right occipital lobe at onset. Two days later, abrupt occurrence of a large hematoma at the left parietal lobe led to deterioration of her consciousness. She underwent emergent evacuation of a large hematoma containing the infectious cerebral aneurysm proven histologically afterwards. The third patient: A 49-year-old female was suffered from a large hematoma and subdural hematoma accompanied distal posterior
cerebral artery aneurysm
at the right occipital lobe. She was operated by removal of the hematoma and the aneurysm proven as a bacterial infectious aneurysm. The fourth patient: A 71-year-old female had hemiplegia caused by a brain abscess and cerebral hemorrhage in the right temporal lobe and a distal middle
cerebral artery aneurysm
adjacent to the same region. Trapping of the aneurysm was undertaken and clinical course was uneventful. Attention needs to be paid to the various cerebrovascular condition arising from the bacterial embolus of infective
endocarditis
.
...
PMID:[Four cases of the infectious cerebral aneurysms]. 1560 96
A 62-year-old male presented with an unusually large mycotic aneurysm mimicking a saccular aneurysm manifesting as coma and hypotension. Computed tomography showed intracerebral and intraventricular hemorrhage. He was in septic shock due to acute infectious endocarditis. Cerebral angiography disclosed a large distal anterior
cerebral artery aneurysm
. The diagnosis was mycotic aneurysm based on the morphological features and associated
endocarditis
. The aneurysm and the parent artery were successfully occluded by endovascular embolization. High-dose antibiotic therapy in the following 6 weeks resulted in resolution of the infectious endocarditis. Early exclusion of ruptured mycotic aneurysm is mandatory because of the high risk of rerupture. Endovascular treatment is an effective alternative for mycotic aneurysms, especially if the patient's general condition is poor. Parent artery occlusion can be safely tolerated if the aneurysm is located distally.
...
PMID:Endovascular treatment for a unusually large mycotic aneurysm manifesting as intracerebral hemorrhage - case report. 1712 70
We report a case of spontaneous subdural haematoma due to ruptured intracranial infectious aneurysm, presenting with bilingual aphasia and illustrating differential language recovery. A 62-year-old right-handed bilingual gentleman, with a diagnosis of infective
endocarditis
, developed headache and became expressively aphasic in the English language. Three days later he was receptively and expressively aphasic in both English and Arabic. Cranial MRI scans showed a left-sided acute subdural haematoma with mass effect and midline shift. Contrast CT brain scans showed an enhancing speck adjacent to the clot and cerebral angiogram confirmed a distal middle
cerebral artery aneurysm
. He underwent image-guided craniotomy, evacuation of the subdural haematoma and excision of the aneurysm. Histopathological examination was consistent with an infectious intracranial aneurysm. Postoperatively his aphasia did not improve immediately. He had widened pulse pressure due to severe aortic regurgitation, confirmed on echocardiography. He underwent aortic valve replacement and mitral valve repair, following which his aphasia recovered gradually. Initially the recovery of his language was limited to Arabic. About a week later he recovered his English language as well. At 3-year follow-up he is doing well and has no neurological deficits. His aphasia has recovered completely. The present case is unique because of (a) presence of pure subdural haematoma, and (b) the differential susceptibility and recovery of native (L1) and acquired language (L2) in presence of a common pathology. The neurology of language in a bilingual is analysed and possible mechanisms discussed.
...
PMID:Bilingual aphasia due to spontaneous acute subdural haematoma from a ruptured intracranial infectious aneurysm. 1859 95
We report a case of infective
endocarditis
due to Neisseria sicca complicated by intracranial and popliteal aneurysms and hepatic and splenic infarcts in a patient with a bicuspid aortic valve. No predisposing factor other than poor dental condition was found. The patient fully recovered after antibiotic therapy, aortic and mitral valve replacement, endovascular occlusion of the middle-
cerebral artery aneurysm
, and surgical treatment of the popliteal artery aneurysm.
...
PMID:Neisseria sicca Endocarditis Complicated by Intracranial and Popliteal Aneurysms in a Patient with a Bicuspid Aortic Valve. 2347 38
To date, S. alactolyticus
endocarditis
complicated by middle
cerebral artery aneurysm
has not been reported. We describe the case of a 65-year-old female with a history of hypertrophic cardiomyopathy with left ventricular outflow tract obstruction presenting with confusion and a apical holosystolic murmur. Angiography of the brain identified new bilobed left middle
cerebral artery aneurysm
. Serial blood cultures grew S. alactolyticus, and aortic and mitral valve vegetation were discovered on transesophageal echocardiography. The patient was treated with antimicrobial therapy, mitral and aortic valve replacements, and microsurgical clipping of cerebral aneurysm. This case serves to highlight the pathogenicity of a sparsely described bacterium belonging to the heterogenous S. bovis complex.
...
PMID:A Rare Case of Streptococcus alactolyticus Infective Endocarditis Complicated by Septic Emboli and Mycotic Left Middle Cerebral Artery Aneurysm. 2752 36
Infectious intracranial aneurysms (IIA) are rare but encountered when associated with rupture or detected on screening of high risk patients. The time course of the development of these aneurysms is unknown. Ultimately, the data published on mycotic aneurysms are in the form of case series, retrospective studies, with one recent systematic review, all of which have difficulty defining specifics regarding aneurysmal formation in these patients. We present a case that may help define the time frame of mycotic aneurysm growth. A patient with
endocarditis
, first identified to have a distal middle
cerebral artery aneurysm
treated with Onyx embolization, and an otherwise unremarkable cerebral angiogram experienced significant subarachnoid hemorrhage 5 days later. Within that short time frame on appropriate antibiotic therapy she developed and ruptured a basilar tip aneurysm, which was subsequently treated with coil embolization.
...
PMID:Acute Development and Rupture of a Basilar Tip Mycotic Aneurysm. 3066 Aug 78