Search results for "cavernous sinus"
showing 4 items of 14 documents
Role of Surgery in Patients with Rare Etiologies of Cavernous Sinus Masses
2019
The so-called one-and-a-half syndrome, type II: a new syndrome?
1999
Objective: The term one-and-a-half syndrome, type II, was recently coined and has been applied to two somewhat different eye movement disorders: the loss of voluntary horizontal eye movements except for adduction in one eye (one patient with two lesions, one in the cerebral hemisphere and the other in the cavernous sinus) and the loss of all voluntary horizontal eye movements with adduction nystagmus in the right eye on attempted gaze to the left and preserved abduction in both eyes with the doll’s head maneuver (one patient with infarction of the midbrain). The justification of the term ‘one-and-a-half syndrome, type II’ is questioned. Design: Retrospective analysis of 9000 consecutive ele…
Antithrombotic therapy of Cerebral cavernous malformations
2020
Abstract Cavernous malformations are recognized as the most common vascular anomalies in the brain, that often lead to hemorrhage with neurological symptoms. Usually the treatment is surgical removal or stereotactic radiotherapy. We present a case of a slow-flow vascular anomaly located in the cavernous sinus with recurrent partial thrombotic areas. Inspired by treatment of peripheral venous anomalies antithrombotic therapy was initiated instead of surgery or stereotactic radiotherapy. This led to complete spontaneous resolution of the lesion and normalization of symptoms within nine months. The patient never showed any symptoms over a period of eight years while continuing antithrombotic t…
Cavernous sinus metastasis from oropharyngeal squamous cell carcinoma.
2007
Metastasis to the cavernous sinus from head and neck cancer is uncommon and has been previously reported by a few authors. It is usually a late manifestation of the primary tumor and may be the first evidence of a widespread dissemination of the disease. Main clinical findings are those related with involvement of cranial nerves III to VI as they pass through the cavernous sinus. Although diagnosis may be difficult, the appearance of clinical and radiological findings of cavernous sinus involvement in a context of head and neck cancer must alert us about an intracranial metastatic infiltration. In most cases treatment is palliative with radiotherapy and/or chemotherapy. The prognosis of thi…