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Query: UMLS:C0018681 (
headache
)
56,091
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
160 women who had died during pregnancy or after delivery were studied.
Intracranial venous thrombosis
(ICVT) was found in 10 (6.25%) cases. Most often extensive dural sinus phlebothrombosis and rarely isolated meningeal or cerebral phlebothrombosis were observed. Multiple thrombi in cerebral microcirculation presented the most characteristic morphological feature in all cases. Disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC) with microthrombi in two or more parenchymal organs was found in 8 cases. Delayed clinical onset and prolonged progressive course was most frequently observed. Persistent
headache
, haemiparesis or haemiplegia, convulsions, epileptic seizures, disturbances in consciousness and coma occurred most often. These clinical manifestations were due to multiple haemorrhagic or ischaemic cerebral infarctions and in a single case to haemorrhage. The discussion was centered on the assumption that ICVT in pregnant and parturient women might be a distinct clinicoanatomical form of DIC.
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PMID:Intracranial venous thrombosis in relation to pregnancy and delivery. 261 68
Intracranial venous thrombosis
is a rare but potentially fatal complication of pregnancy and the postpartum period. The presenting symptoms can mimic those of a postdural puncture
headache
and are easily misdiagnosed, especially in a parturient who has undergone regional anesthesia. The incidence of 10-20 per 100,000 is likely higher than reported. The etiology, clinical presentation and course, risk factors, management, and relation of intracranial venous thrombosis to pregnancy are presented. Published case reports and series of intracranial venous thrombosis that have either occurred during the puerperium or involved women of childbearing age after dural puncture are summarized. Finally, the diagnosis and management of intracranial venous thrombosis in parturients, focusing on parturients who have undergone regional anesthesia, is discussed. When intracranial venous thrombosis occurs in a parturient after regional anesthesia, it is often treated as a post-dural puncture
headache
.
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PMID:Intracranial venous thrombosis in the parturient. 1789 62
Intracranial venous thrombosis
may occur at any time from infancy to old age and its clinical expression varies widely and sometimes it may present without focal signs. The most common symptoms are:
headache
, vomiting, transient or persistent visual obscuration, focal or generalized seizures, lethargy and coma, while papilledema is a common sign. There may also be alternating focal deficits, hemiparesis or paraparesis, or other focal neurological deficits depending on the location of the venous structures involved. Symptom onset is either acute, subacute or chronic. Even with a severe initial presentation, partial or complete recovery is possible, underlying the importance of early recognition. Antithrombotic treatment must be administered at diagnosis as soon as possible.
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PMID:Clinical presentations of cerebral vein and sinus thrombosis. 1800 54