Subdural Space

14,000,000 Leading Edge Experts on the ideXlab platform

Scan Science and Technology

Contact Leading Edge Experts & Companies

Scan Science and Technology

Contact Leading Edge Experts & Companies

The Experts below are selected from a list of 3528 Experts worldwide ranked by ideXlab platform

Giuseppe Lanzino - One of the best experts on this subject based on the ideXlab platform.

  • subacute spinal Subdural hematoma after spontaneous resolution of cranial Subdural hematoma causal relationship or coincidence case report
    Journal of Neurosurgery, 2004
    Co-Authors: Carlo Bortolotti, Huan Wang, Kenneth Fraser, Giuseppe Lanzino
    Abstract:

    ✓ The etiopathogenesis of traumatic spinal Subdural hematoma (SSH) is uncertain. Unlike the supratentorial Subdural Space, no bridging veins traverse the spinal Subdural Space. The authors describe a case of subacute SSH that occurred after spontaneous resolution of traumatic intracranial SDH and suggest a causal relationship between the two. A 23-year-old woman suffered an acute intracranial SDH after a snowboarding accident. There was no clinical or radiological evidence of spine injury. Conservative management of the supratentorial SDH resulted in spontaneous radiologically documented resolution with redistribution of blood in the Subdural Space. Four days after the injury, the patient started noticing new onset of mild low-back pain. The pain progressively worsened. Magnetic resonance imaging of the lumbosacral spine 10 days after the original injury revealed a large L4—S2 SDH. Ten days after the original injury, bilateral L5—S1 laminotomy and drainage of the subacute spinal SDH were performed. The pa...

  • Subacute spinal Subdural hematoma after spontaneous resolution of cranial Subdural hematoma: causal relationship or coincidence? Case report.
    Journal of neurosurgery, 2004
    Co-Authors: Carlo Bortolotti, Huan Wang, Kenneth Fraser, Giuseppe Lanzino
    Abstract:

    The etiopathogenesis of traumatic spinal Subdural hematoma (SSH) is uncertain. Unlike the supratentorial Subdural Space, no bridging veins traverse the spinal Subdural Space. The authors describe a case of subacute SSH that occurred after spontaneous resolution of traumatic intracranial SDH and suggest a causal relationship between the two. A 23-year-old woman suffered an acute intracranial SDH after a snowboarding accident. There was no clinical or radiological evidence of spine injury. Conservative management of the supratentorial SDH resulted in spontaneous radiologically documented resolution with redistribution of blood in the Subdural Space. Four days after the injury, the patient started noticing new onset of mild low-back pain. The pain progressively worsened. Magnetic resonance imaging of the lumbosacral spine 10 days after the original injury revealed a large L4-S2 SDH. Ten days after the original injury, bilateral L5-S1 laminotomy and drainage of the subacute spinal SDH were performed. The patient experienced immediate pain relief. The authors hypothesize that in some cases spinal SDH may be related to redistribution of blood from the supratentorial Subdural Space.

Carlo Bortolotti - One of the best experts on this subject based on the ideXlab platform.

  • subacute spinal Subdural hematoma after spontaneous resolution of cranial Subdural hematoma causal relationship or coincidence case report
    Journal of Neurosurgery, 2004
    Co-Authors: Carlo Bortolotti, Huan Wang, Kenneth Fraser, Giuseppe Lanzino
    Abstract:

    ✓ The etiopathogenesis of traumatic spinal Subdural hematoma (SSH) is uncertain. Unlike the supratentorial Subdural Space, no bridging veins traverse the spinal Subdural Space. The authors describe a case of subacute SSH that occurred after spontaneous resolution of traumatic intracranial SDH and suggest a causal relationship between the two. A 23-year-old woman suffered an acute intracranial SDH after a snowboarding accident. There was no clinical or radiological evidence of spine injury. Conservative management of the supratentorial SDH resulted in spontaneous radiologically documented resolution with redistribution of blood in the Subdural Space. Four days after the injury, the patient started noticing new onset of mild low-back pain. The pain progressively worsened. Magnetic resonance imaging of the lumbosacral spine 10 days after the original injury revealed a large L4—S2 SDH. Ten days after the original injury, bilateral L5—S1 laminotomy and drainage of the subacute spinal SDH were performed. The pa...

  • Subacute spinal Subdural hematoma after spontaneous resolution of cranial Subdural hematoma: causal relationship or coincidence? Case report.
    Journal of neurosurgery, 2004
    Co-Authors: Carlo Bortolotti, Huan Wang, Kenneth Fraser, Giuseppe Lanzino
    Abstract:

    The etiopathogenesis of traumatic spinal Subdural hematoma (SSH) is uncertain. Unlike the supratentorial Subdural Space, no bridging veins traverse the spinal Subdural Space. The authors describe a case of subacute SSH that occurred after spontaneous resolution of traumatic intracranial SDH and suggest a causal relationship between the two. A 23-year-old woman suffered an acute intracranial SDH after a snowboarding accident. There was no clinical or radiological evidence of spine injury. Conservative management of the supratentorial SDH resulted in spontaneous radiologically documented resolution with redistribution of blood in the Subdural Space. Four days after the injury, the patient started noticing new onset of mild low-back pain. The pain progressively worsened. Magnetic resonance imaging of the lumbosacral spine 10 days after the original injury revealed a large L4-S2 SDH. Ten days after the original injury, bilateral L5-S1 laminotomy and drainage of the subacute spinal SDH were performed. The patient experienced immediate pain relief. The authors hypothesize that in some cases spinal SDH may be related to redistribution of blood from the supratentorial Subdural Space.

Steven L. Giannotta - One of the best experts on this subject based on the ideXlab platform.

  • arachnoid cyst rupture producing Subdural hygroma and intracranial hypertension case reports
    Neurosurgery, 1997
    Co-Authors: Felipe C Albuquerque, Steven L. Giannotta
    Abstract:

    OBJECTIVE: To analyze the association between arachnoid cysts and Subdural hygromas. METHODS: We reviewed five cases of arachnoid cysts that ruptured, producing acute Subdural hygromas. The surgical management and diagnostic methods used are assessed. RESULTS: Five male patients ranging in age from 6 to 25 years sustained the rupture of arachnoid cysts, which produced acute Subdural hygromas. Four of the patients had incurred blunt head trauma. All patients presented with symptoms referable to intracranial hypertension. The pathognomonic features of a middle fossa arachnoid cyst (MFAC) were noted on the computed tomographic scans and/or magnetic resonance images of each patient. The hygroma exerted mass effect on the ipsilateral hemisphere and was noted to be under significant pressure at the time of surgical intervention in each case. Two of the five cases are unique in the literature. In one, a coexisting quadrigeminal cyst ruptured, producing a Subdural hygroma ipsilateral to the MFAC and dilating the basal cisterns. In the other, the MFAC ruptured into the basal cisterns as well as into the Subdural Space. The MFAC in each of the remaining three patients ruptured into the Subdural Space alone. All patients were treated with drainage of the Subdural Space. In the two patients in whom the basal cisterns were involved, both the hygromas and the MFACs failed to change significantly in size. The hygromas resolved completely and the MFACs decreased in size considerably in the three patients without cisternal involvement. CONCLUSION: The rupture of an arachnoid cyst can produce a Subdural hygroma and intracranial hypertension. The latter mandates emergent drainage of the Subdural Space. In patients in whom the basal cisterns are not dilated by cyst rupture, both the MFACs and hygromas resolve after Subdural drainage.

Huan Wang - One of the best experts on this subject based on the ideXlab platform.

  • subacute spinal Subdural hematoma after spontaneous resolution of cranial Subdural hematoma causal relationship or coincidence case report
    Journal of Neurosurgery, 2004
    Co-Authors: Carlo Bortolotti, Huan Wang, Kenneth Fraser, Giuseppe Lanzino
    Abstract:

    ✓ The etiopathogenesis of traumatic spinal Subdural hematoma (SSH) is uncertain. Unlike the supratentorial Subdural Space, no bridging veins traverse the spinal Subdural Space. The authors describe a case of subacute SSH that occurred after spontaneous resolution of traumatic intracranial SDH and suggest a causal relationship between the two. A 23-year-old woman suffered an acute intracranial SDH after a snowboarding accident. There was no clinical or radiological evidence of spine injury. Conservative management of the supratentorial SDH resulted in spontaneous radiologically documented resolution with redistribution of blood in the Subdural Space. Four days after the injury, the patient started noticing new onset of mild low-back pain. The pain progressively worsened. Magnetic resonance imaging of the lumbosacral spine 10 days after the original injury revealed a large L4—S2 SDH. Ten days after the original injury, bilateral L5—S1 laminotomy and drainage of the subacute spinal SDH were performed. The pa...

  • Subacute spinal Subdural hematoma after spontaneous resolution of cranial Subdural hematoma: causal relationship or coincidence? Case report.
    Journal of neurosurgery, 2004
    Co-Authors: Carlo Bortolotti, Huan Wang, Kenneth Fraser, Giuseppe Lanzino
    Abstract:

    The etiopathogenesis of traumatic spinal Subdural hematoma (SSH) is uncertain. Unlike the supratentorial Subdural Space, no bridging veins traverse the spinal Subdural Space. The authors describe a case of subacute SSH that occurred after spontaneous resolution of traumatic intracranial SDH and suggest a causal relationship between the two. A 23-year-old woman suffered an acute intracranial SDH after a snowboarding accident. There was no clinical or radiological evidence of spine injury. Conservative management of the supratentorial SDH resulted in spontaneous radiologically documented resolution with redistribution of blood in the Subdural Space. Four days after the injury, the patient started noticing new onset of mild low-back pain. The pain progressively worsened. Magnetic resonance imaging of the lumbosacral spine 10 days after the original injury revealed a large L4-S2 SDH. Ten days after the original injury, bilateral L5-S1 laminotomy and drainage of the subacute spinal SDH were performed. The patient experienced immediate pain relief. The authors hypothesize that in some cases spinal SDH may be related to redistribution of blood from the supratentorial Subdural Space.

Kenneth Fraser - One of the best experts on this subject based on the ideXlab platform.

  • subacute spinal Subdural hematoma after spontaneous resolution of cranial Subdural hematoma causal relationship or coincidence case report
    Journal of Neurosurgery, 2004
    Co-Authors: Carlo Bortolotti, Huan Wang, Kenneth Fraser, Giuseppe Lanzino
    Abstract:

    ✓ The etiopathogenesis of traumatic spinal Subdural hematoma (SSH) is uncertain. Unlike the supratentorial Subdural Space, no bridging veins traverse the spinal Subdural Space. The authors describe a case of subacute SSH that occurred after spontaneous resolution of traumatic intracranial SDH and suggest a causal relationship between the two. A 23-year-old woman suffered an acute intracranial SDH after a snowboarding accident. There was no clinical or radiological evidence of spine injury. Conservative management of the supratentorial SDH resulted in spontaneous radiologically documented resolution with redistribution of blood in the Subdural Space. Four days after the injury, the patient started noticing new onset of mild low-back pain. The pain progressively worsened. Magnetic resonance imaging of the lumbosacral spine 10 days after the original injury revealed a large L4—S2 SDH. Ten days after the original injury, bilateral L5—S1 laminotomy and drainage of the subacute spinal SDH were performed. The pa...

  • Subacute spinal Subdural hematoma after spontaneous resolution of cranial Subdural hematoma: causal relationship or coincidence? Case report.
    Journal of neurosurgery, 2004
    Co-Authors: Carlo Bortolotti, Huan Wang, Kenneth Fraser, Giuseppe Lanzino
    Abstract:

    The etiopathogenesis of traumatic spinal Subdural hematoma (SSH) is uncertain. Unlike the supratentorial Subdural Space, no bridging veins traverse the spinal Subdural Space. The authors describe a case of subacute SSH that occurred after spontaneous resolution of traumatic intracranial SDH and suggest a causal relationship between the two. A 23-year-old woman suffered an acute intracranial SDH after a snowboarding accident. There was no clinical or radiological evidence of spine injury. Conservative management of the supratentorial SDH resulted in spontaneous radiologically documented resolution with redistribution of blood in the Subdural Space. Four days after the injury, the patient started noticing new onset of mild low-back pain. The pain progressively worsened. Magnetic resonance imaging of the lumbosacral spine 10 days after the original injury revealed a large L4-S2 SDH. Ten days after the original injury, bilateral L5-S1 laminotomy and drainage of the subacute spinal SDH were performed. The patient experienced immediate pain relief. The authors hypothesize that in some cases spinal SDH may be related to redistribution of blood from the supratentorial Subdural Space.