scholarly journals History of surgery for cerebrovascular disease in children. Part III. Arteriovenous malformations

2006 ◽  
Vol 20 (6) ◽  
pp. 1-7 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jeffrey P. Blount ◽  
R. Shane Tubbs ◽  
W. Jerry Oakes ◽  
Robin P. Humphreys

✓ Arteriovenous malformations (AVMs) are the most common cause of intracerebral hemorrhage in children. In this paper the authors trace the historical evolution of the recognition, diagnosis, and treatment of pediatric intracerebral AVMs, and they summarize the contemporary approach and current controversies surrounding treatment of these lesions. Important distinctions between adult and pediatric AVMs are emphasized.

Blood ◽  
2012 ◽  
Vol 120 (21) ◽  
pp. 4634-4634
Author(s):  
Mihoko Takai ◽  
Naoko Hosono ◽  
Shinji Kishi ◽  
Takahiro Yamauchi ◽  
Yoshimasa Urasaki ◽  
...  

Abstract Abstract 4634 Summary: Autoimmune factor XIII (FXIII) deficiency is an extremely rare bleeding disorder that can be life-threatening without prompt diagnosis and treatment. Many clinicians, even experienced hematologists, are unaware of this critical disorder. The causes and mechanisms of autoimmune FXIII deficiency remain unclear, but patients should be given top priority in receiving FXIII concentrate and immunosuppressive drugs when this is suspected to avoid fatal hemorrhage. We report the first Japanese case of autoimmune FXIII deficiency presenting as acute intracerebral hemorrhage. The clinical manifestations allowed prompt diagnosis and effective treatment in the form of emergency open drainage and infusion of FXIII concentrates combined with prednisolone therapy, leading to success in saving the life of this patient. Case: A 68-year-old man was hospitalized in another department of our hospital with abdominal pain and diffuse purpura of the abdominal skin in the absence of any history of trauma. He did not have a family history of bleeding tendency. Since he had been receiving low-dose aspirin because of a previous stroke, he received a transfusion of red cell concentrate and was discharged after cessation of aspirin. Two weeks later, he was taken to an emergency room with left hemiplegia. Computed tomography (CT) revealed an intracerebral hemorrhage measuring 4 cm in diameter. Sixteen hours after hospitalization, emergency open drainage was performed because of decreased levels of consciousness due to an expanding intracerebral hemorrhage measuring 7 cm with midline shift. Bleeding was controlled during the operation and CT showed no evidence of further bleeding after surgery. However, on postoperative day 2, subcutaneous bleeding spontaneously developed on the patient's head. Platelet counts and coagulation tests were normal, and other tests showed no evidence of factor VIII, factor IX or von Willebrand factor deficiencies. Given the lack of evidence of other autoimmune disorders or family history of bleeding tendency, we suspected idiopathic autoimmune FXIII deficiency and immediately initiated administration of FXIII concentrate. After treatment with FXIII concentrate, subcutaneous bleeding on the head was arrested and level of consciousness had recovered at all. 3 days after it was confirmed that FXIII activity was as low as 11%, and was not corrected by normal plasma at 1:1 in the cross-mixing test, suggesting the presence of anti-FXIII inhibitor and corroborating our clinical diagnosis. Based on the detection of anti-FXIII A autoantibodies in dot blot assay, we immediately started immunosuppressive therapy using prednisolone at 1 mg/kg combined with FXIII concentrate. Three weeks later, inhibition of FXIII activity was partly improved. FXIII activity was 36%, and 1:1 cross-mixing test was corrected, indicating that immunosuppressive therapy with prednisolone was proving successful. Four weeks later, his surgical wound had healed and FXIII concentration injection was discontinued. Prednisolone tapering was started, and after 8 weeks, with prednisolone tapered to 35 mg, FXIII activity was elevated to 53%. This was not yet sufficient, but anti-FXIII A subunit autoantibodies had disappeared completely, first as free-form antibody and then as bound/complexed antibody. Successful results were achieved in response to short-term treatment. In fact, in some of the 28 cases reported from Japan, anti-FXIII inhibitors were continued despite immunosuppressive therapy for a few years. The next target was to stop prednisolone therapy, because the major causes of death in patients with autoimmune FXIII deficiency is bleeding or infection. Why and when the patient developed autoantibodies remains unclear, as he had no evidence of other autoimmune disorders. This report describes a remarkably successful case in which early diagnosis and treatment of autoimmune FXIII deficiency achieved good outcomes for a case complicated by intracerebral hemorrhage. All clinicians should consider the possibility of this rare disease when they encounter patients who present with life-threatening bleeding and normal coagulation tests are inconclusive. Prompt diagnosis and treatment are crucial in saving the life of the patient. Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


Neurosurgery ◽  
1985 ◽  
Vol 17 (1) ◽  
pp. 88-93 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ronald T. Zellem ◽  
William A. Buchheit

Abstract The authors describe a case of multiple supratentorial intracranial arteriovenous malformations in a patient with a family history of cerebrovascular disease. There was no sign of any other vascular dysplasia. A brief review of this rare entity is given. (Neurosurgery 17:88-93, 1985)


2017 ◽  
Vol 11 (4) ◽  
pp. 449-453 ◽  
Author(s):  
Eliasz Engelhardt

ABSTRACT. The long-standing concept of “apoplexy' can be followed from Antiquity, passing through the Middle Ages and Renaissance, and reaching the Modern era and the present day, with the new designation of “stroke”. The definition of “apoplexy” can be divided, by the history of autopsy, into a period predating this practice, which spanned from Antiquity until the Renaissance, with a relatively stable clinically-based umbrella concept, and an autopsy period of the Modern era, when the condition was subdivided into several subtypes. Thus, it took about 2,500 years assembling the numerous pieces of information to achieve a fairly well-defined picture. The “stroke” concept inherited the information developed for “apoplexy”, incorporating all historical acquisitions to form the current state of this knowledge.


Author(s):  
Viktoriia Sviatchenko

The article provides a thorough account on A. A. Potebnia’s views on the systemic nature of the language presented in his works on historical phonetics of the Eastern Slavic languages. The practical implementation of his ideas in this respect is studied. The comprehension of the systemic character of phonetic changes of the Khrakiv linguistic school representative has urged the search of their interrelations as well as the attempt to identify homogeneous phonetic laws that share a common cause and act in a certain period of the language history, which is emphasized by the author of the article. It is noted that A. A. Potebnia focused on consonant changes that took place in different conditions. The causes of phonetic laws mentioned in the article can not be reduced to the interaction of sounds in a speech stream, the material provided by A. A. Potebnia proves that they are to be found within the phonetic system itself. The author of the article shares the views of V. A. Glushchenko that Potebnia’s investigations embrace all phonetic laws in the history of the Eastern Slavic languages’ consonant systems. The relevance of Potebnia’s research on the systemic nature of the language that has retained their value for the linguistics of the XX — beginning of XXI century is identified.


2020 ◽  

The book was compiled on the materials of the scientific conference “Anthropomorphic and zoomorphic representations of nations and states in the Slavic cultural discourse” (2019), held at the Institute of Slavic Studies of the Russian Academy of Sciences (Moscow) and devoted to the history of the nations’ personifications and generalized ethnic images in period of “imagined communities” formation. This process is reconstructing on verbal and visual sources and by methods of various disciplines. The historical evolution of such zoomorphic incarnations of nations as an Eagle (in the Polish patriotic poetry of the first third of the 19th cent), a Falcon (in the South Slavic and Czech cultures in the 19th cent), a Griffin (during the formation of the Cassubian ethnocultural identity) is considered. The animalistic national representations in the Estonian caricature of the interwar twenty years of the 20th cent., so as the functioning of the Bear’s allegory as a symbol of Russia in modern Russian souvenir products are analyzed. The originality of zoomorphic symbolism in Polish and Soviet cultures is shown оn the examples of para- and metaheraldic images in XXth cent. The transformation of the verbal and visual images of “Mother Russia” personifications in Russian Empire was reconstructed. The evolution of various allegories of ethnic “Self” and “Others” is presented by caricatures of 19th – 20th cent. in Slovenian periodic and in Russian “Satyricon” journal (1914–1918).


Author(s):  
Mirazkar D. Pandareesh ◽  
Vivek Hamse Kameshwar ◽  
Kullaiah K. Byrappa

: Prostate cancer is a multifactorial disease that mainly occurs due to the accumulation of somatic, genetic and epigenetic changes, resulting in the inactivation of tumor-suppressor genes and activation of oncogenes. Mutations in genes, specifically those that control cell growth and division or the repair of damaged DNA, make the cells grow and divide uncontrollably to form a tumor. The risk of developing prostate cancer depends upon the gene that has undergone the mutation. Identifying such genetic risk factors for prostate cancer pose a challenge for the researchers. Besides genetic mutations, many epigenetic alterations including DNA methylation, histone modifications (methylation, acetylation, ubiquitylation, sumoylation, and phosphorylation) nucleosomal remodelling, and chromosomal looping, have been significantly contributed to the onset of prostate cancer as well as the prognosis, diagnosis, and treatment of prostate cancer. Chronic inflammation also plays a major role in the onset and progression of human cancer, via. modifications in the tumor microenvironment by initiating epithelial-mesenchymal transition and remodelling the extracellular matrix. In this article, the authors present a brief history of the mechanisms and potential links between the genetic aberrations, epigenetic changes, inflammation and inflammasomes that are known to contribute to the prognosis of prostate cancer. Furthermore, the authors examine and discuss clinical potential of prostate carcinogenesis in relation to epigenetics and inflammation for its diagnosis and treatment.


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