scholarly journals Posterior cranial vault reconstruction for sagittal and lambdoid suture craniosynostosis

Author(s):  
G.E. Ghali
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alexandra J. Borst ◽  
Christopher M. Bonfield ◽  
Poornachanda S. Deenadayalan ◽  
Chi H. Le ◽  
Meng Xu ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Ai Peng Tan ◽  
Shabana Rasheed ◽  
Jai Sidpra ◽  
Mei Chin Lim ◽  
Greg James ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Vol 34 ◽  
pp. 122-129
Author(s):  
Jonathan D. Bethard ◽  
Timothy J. Ainger ◽  
Andre Gonciar ◽  
Zsolt Nyárádi
Keyword(s):  

2021 ◽  
pp. 1118-1123
Author(s):  
Kengo Setta ◽  
Takaaki Beppu ◽  
Yuichi Sato ◽  
Hiroaki Saura ◽  
Junichi Nomura ◽  
...  

Malignant lymphoma of the head rarely arises outside of the brain parenchyma as primary cranial vault lymphoma (PCVL). A case of PCVL that invaded from subcutaneous tissue into the brain, passing through the skull, and occurred after mild head trauma is reported along with a review of the literature. The patient was a 75-year-old man with decreased activity. One month before his visit to our hospital, he bruised the left frontal area of his head. Magnetic resonance imaging showed homogeneously enhanced tumors with contrast media in the subcutaneous tissue corresponding to the head impact area and the cerebral parenchyma, but no obvious abnormal findings in the skull. A biopsy with craniotomy was performed under general anesthesia. The pathological diagnosis was diffuse large B-cell lymphoma. On histological examination, tumor cells grew aggressively under the skin. Tumor cells invaded along the emissary vein into the external table without remarkable bone destruction and extended across the skull through the Haversian canals in the diploe. Tumor cells were found only at the perivascular areas in the dura mater and extended into the brain parenchyma. Considering the history of head trauma and the neuroimaging and histological findings, the PCVL in the present case arose primarily under the skin, passed though the skull and dura mater, and invaded along vessels and reached the brain.


Author(s):  
Federico DI Rocco ◽  
Maria Licci ◽  
Agnes Paasche ◽  
Alexandru Szathmari ◽  
Pierre Aurélien Beuriat ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Pramath Kakodkar ◽  
Lena Mary Houlihan ◽  
Mark Preul ◽  
Niamh Bermingham ◽  
Chris Lim
Keyword(s):  

1908 ◽  
Vol 28 ◽  
pp. 586-594
Author(s):  
W. Ramsay Smith

The inca bone in the human skull is usually regarded as the homologue of the interparietal of some other mammals. The commonest or best-known form of the interparietal occurs in the rabbit as a single somewhat oval bone, its long axis being transverse, filling up a space between the parietals just in front of the line or curve of the occipital.Carl Vogt (Lectures on Man, London Anthropological Society, 1864) makes frequent and detailed reference to a Helvetian skull. From the woodcuts, p. 52, fig. 15; p. 66, fig. 22; p. 70, fig. 26; p. 389, fig. 124; and p. 390, fig. 125, it is clear that a small round undivided bone occurred in this skull in a situation roughly corresponding with the position of the interparietal in the rabbit. I say “roughly,” because the posterior border of the bone in the Helvetian skull just touches the occipital at the lambdoid suture, while in the rabbit the interparietal for about half the extent of its perimeter is in contact with the occipital.


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