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Query: UMLS:C0018681 (headache)
56,091 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

21 patients, who fulfilled the clinical and angiographic criteria of a spontaneous carotid cavernous fistula (CCF), were studied at the Alfried Krupp Hospital, Essen, Germany, between 1980 and 1988. Of these patients, 4 had direct shunts between the internal carotid artery and the cavernous sinus and 17 patients had unilateral or bilateral dural shunts between meningeal branches of the internal and/or external carotid artery and the cavernous sinus. The most common initial symptoms were eye redness, bruit and headache. 6 of 12 patients with double vision had mechanical disorders of eye movement. A rapid irreversible loss of vision occurred in 2 patients. In 9 of 21 patients either progressive visual deterioration, proptosis or severe orbital pain necessitated prompt institution of treatment. All direct fistulas could be occluded by the use of the detachable balloon technique. 5 patients with dural CCF were successfully treated with particle embolization of the external carotid artery blood supply. In dural CCF not requiring emergent treatment, combined carotid artery and jugular vein compression was preferred and resulted in complete cure or sufficient improvement in all but one patient. We recommend this method as the first stage of treatment in dural CCF with uncomplicated course.
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PMID:[Clinical aspects and treatment of spontaneous carotid artery-cavernous sinus fistula]. 261 55

A 28-year-old woman is reported with intermittent exophthalmos and acute orbital hemorrhage which developed after a warning symptom of recurrent positional headache. The cause was proven to be a primary orbital varix. Conservative measure was considered in this case. The characteristics of the primary orbital varix are presented and the problems of diagnosis and treatment are discussed.
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PMID:Intermittent exophthalmos. 277 24

Angiomatous malformations of the central nervous system are relatively rare and have a serious prognosis. Clinical manifestations of such lesions of the spine include back pain associated with motor and sensory weakness, progressing to complete paraplegia. In angiomatous involvement of the brain, the symptoms may progress from headaches to coma and death. Computerized tomography and magnetic resonance imaging are new noninvasive modalities used in the diagnosis of such malformation, but they have not replaced myelography and angiography. Up to the past decade, the management of angiomatous lesions of the CNS was only surgical. Angiographic embolization is now widely accepted as an alternate method of management. Experience with embolic treatment of 3 cases is reported. In a 15-year-old boy with two adjacent thoracic vertebral hemangiomas (D7 and D8) compressing the spinal cord, embolization was used before surgery. A 23-year-old man with acute myelopathy due to extraretro-medullary arteriovenous malformations of the spinal cord (D9-D11) was successfully treated by selective embolization via catheter of the right 10th intercostal feeding vessel. An 82-year-old man had proptosis, bruit and pulsation in the right eyeball and loss of vision. Arteriovenous malformation of the dura of the anterior cranial fossa was demonstrated and was completely cured by bilateral selective embolization of the feeding branches of the internal maxillary arteries.
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PMID:[Angiographic management of angiomatous malformations in the central nervous system]. 279 43

This report summarizes the treatment of two patients with cystic fibrosis and frontal sinus mucopyocele. The first patient, an 18-year-old boy, had a 1-year history of a proptosis of the left eye. The second patient, a 28-year-old woman, had a 3-month history of intermittent diplopia. In both cases, the frontal sinus mucocele was diagnosed by computed tomographic scans; both were successfully treated with an osteoplastic flap and fat obliteration of the frontal sinus. When a patient with cystic fibrosis presents with a history of unilateral proptosis, diplopia, or frontal headaches, a paranasal sinus mucocele should be suspected.
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PMID:Frontal sinus mucopyocele in cystic fibrosis. 315 42

Bone infarction is common in sickle cell disease; however, involvement of the orbit is not. Only four cases have been reported in the English literature. We describe a patient who presented with headache, proptosis and lid edema due to infarction of the sphenoid bone. The combination of radionuclide bone imaging and computed tomography (CT) of the orbit were useful in differentiating bone infarction from other etiologies of proptosis.
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PMID:Orbital infarction in sickle cell disease. 315 32

Traumatic carotid-cavernous sinus fistula is an uncommon situation resulting from severe trauma, with less than 40 cases having been reported. It is usually associated with a skull base, frontal or mid-facial fracture, but it may also be a spontaneous phenomenon of congenital, infective or degenerative origin. The blood shunts from the internal carotid to the cavernous sinus resulting in pulsating exophthalmos, orbital headache, pain, orbital or frontal bruit, loss of visual acuity, diplopia, ophthalmoplegia and the differential diagnosis should include superior orbital fissure syndrome, orbital apex syndrome and cavernous sinus thrombosis. Several modes of treatment have been proposed. We were recently faced with such a case, who had sustained fractures of the facial skeleton and developed the fistula despite an initial non-contributory angiogram. The patient remained in a permanent coma.
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PMID:Traumatic carotid-cavernous sinus fistula. 320 64

Cavernous sinus thrombosis may occur as a complication of infectious and noninfectious processes. Septic thrombosis of the cavernous sinuses most commonly follows infections of the middle third of the face due to Staphylococcus aureus. Other antecedent sites of infection include paranasal (usually sphenoid) sinusitis, dental abscess and, less often, otitis media. Fever is a nearly constant finding, but headache may not be prominent. Periorbital edema, chemosis, proptosis, and limitation of extraocular movements (especially lateral gaze) develop in almost all recognized cases. Involvement of the opposite eye frequently appears within two days following the onset of unilateral signs. Although computed tomography may be helpful, magnetic resonance imaging is probably the diagnostic procedure of choice. Treatment includes appropriate antibiotics and, oftentimes, surgical drainage of the primary focus of infection. Less than half of the patients recover completely; the mortality rate is approximately 30%.
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PMID:Septic thrombosis of the cavernous sinuses. 328 99

A 35-year-old black man with a 4-year continuous history of multiple paroxysms of unilateral temporal and ocular pain is reported. Multiple (that is, 15-20) attacks occurred in 24 h. There were no symptom-free periods. Mild exophthalmos, marked sweating, nasal congestion, and lacrimation were present on the affected side. There was no response to ergot preparations, steroids, or lithium but dramatic and sustained relief with indomethacin.
Cephalalgia 1987 Sep
PMID:Chronic paroxysmal hemicrania in a South African black. A case report. 365 2

An esthesioneuroblastoma, a rare malignancy of the olfactory nerve, was identified with bone imaging in a four year old male who presented with a history of headaches and proptosis of the right eye. Correlation with CT is provided.
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PMID:Esthesioneuroblastoma imaged with bone scintigraphy. 376 67

We report three cases of coincidental cerebral aneurysm with brain tumor. The incidence of such cases has been said to be 0.3 to 0.7% of all brain tumor cases, and, in our experience, has been 0.9% of 315 patients with brain tumor during the last decade. Case No. 1 was a 60-year-old female suffering from subarachnoid hemorrhage followed by left oculomotor nerve palsy due to rupture of left ICPC aneurysm, with left convexity meningioma which was found incidentally during preoperative cerebral angiography. Case No. 2 was a 47-year-old female suffering from headache, right exophthalmos, and bilateral papilledema. Preoperative CT scan and angiographies revealed right sphenoidal ridge meningioma and unruptured right middle cerebral aneurysm. Case No. 3 was a 28-year-old male with acromegaly. Pituitary adenoma and unruptured anterior communicating artery aneurysm were found preoperatively by CT scan and by angiography, respectively. All cases were well diagnosed preoperatively and surgically treated successfully.
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PMID:[Coincidental cerebral aneurysm with brain tumor: report of three cases]. 404 15


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