Search results for "Ventricular system"

showing 3 items of 13 documents

Concept and Treatment of Hydrocephalus in the Greco-Roman and Early Arabic Medicine

2007

In the ancient medical literature hydrocephalus was not often described although its existence and symptomatology were well known. Most detailed descriptions of hydrocephalus including the surgical treatment are extant in the encyclopaedic works on medicine of the physicians Oreibasios and Aetios from Amida from the 4th and 6th centuries AD, respectively. Because of their broad scientific interests, this type of physicians, typical for the late Roman empire, were known as philosophy-physicians (iota alpha tau rho o sigma o phi iota sigma tau alpha iota). They defined hydrocephalus in contrast to our present understanding as a fluid collection excluding abscesses visible as a bulging tumour …

medicine.medical_specialtyArabicNeurosurgeryAutopsyGreek WorldVentricular systemRoman WorldNeurosurgical ProceduresHumansMedicineTextbooks as TopicHistory AncientHistory 15th CenturyIntracranial pressureCaput succedaneumbusiness.industryArab WorldInfant NewbornMeningesInfantGeneral Medicinemedicine.diseaseHistory MedievalIntracranial Hemorrhage Traumaticlanguage.human_languageHydrocephalusSurgerySkullmedicine.anatomical_structureNeurologylanguageSurgeryNeurology (clinical)businessHydrocephalusmin - Minimally Invasive Neurosurgery
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Femoral neck’s fracture in Fahr’s Syndrome: case report

2016

Fahr's syndrome, also known as "Bilateral Striopallidodentate Calcinosis" (BSPDC) primitive, is a rare neurological disease characterized by the presence of idiopathic, bilateral, symmetrical and abnormal deposition of calcium in areas of the brain that control movements including the basal ganglia, dentate nuclei of the cerebellum, nuclei of thalamus and semi-oval center. We describe a case of a 76-year-old male patient underwent reduction and fixation of a subtrochanteric fracture with intramedullary nail. During post-operative rehabilitation therapists's patient management was difficult due to obvious extrapyramidal symptoms characterized by dysarthria, rigidity, bradykinesia, postural i…

medicine.medical_specialtyCerebellumbusiness.industryMaterials Science (miscellaneous)medicine.medical_treatmentThalamusCase ReportVentricular systemmedicine.diseaselaw.inventionFahr's syndromeIntramedullary rodDysarthriamedicine.anatomical_structurelawBasal gangliamedicineRadiologymedicine.symptombusinessReduction (orthopedic surgery)
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Technique and value of gas and pantopaque cisternography in the diagnosis of cerebello-pontine angle tumours

1971

The techniques of gas and Pantopaque cisternography are described, as well as the various advantages and disadventages of these methods. Patients without neurological signs in whom a small tumour is suspected in the region of the cerebellopontine angle should be examined with Pantopaque. The examination can be carried out as an outpatient procedure. If definite neurological signs are present, gas cisternography is preferable in order to demonstrate secondary displacements of the ventricular system as well as the tumour itself.

medicine.medical_specialtyNeurologymedicine.medical_treatmentContrast MediaCerebellopontine AngleVentricular systemSubarachnoid SpaceVestibulocochlear nervePeripheral Nervous System NeoplasmsMethodsmedicineHumansRadiology Nuclear Medicine and imagingPneumoencephalographyTrigeminal NerveNeuroradiologyBrain NeoplasmsTomography X-Raybusiness.industryVestibulocochlear NerveCerebellopontine anglemedicine.diseasemedicine.anatomical_structureArachnoiditisNeurology (clinical)RadiologySubarachnoid spaceArachnoiditisPneumoencephalographyCardiology and Cardiovascular MedicinebusinessNeurilemmomaNeuroradiology
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