A Giant Cerebral Hydatid Cyst Required Urgent Operation: Case Report

2021 ◽  
Vol 63 ◽  
pp. 102161
Author(s):  
Othman Benhayoune ◽  
Marouane Makhchoune ◽  
Abdelhamid Jehri ◽  
Mohamed Yassine Haouas ◽  
Abdessamad Naja ◽  
...  

2010 ◽  
Vol 44 (3) ◽  
pp. 304-307 ◽  
Author(s):  
Murat Altaş ◽  
Yurdal Serarslan ◽  
Ramazan Davran ◽  
Ömer Evirgen ◽  
Mustafa Aras ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Vol 7 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Masoud Nashibi ◽  
Arash Tafrishinejad ◽  
Zahid Hussain Khan

2016 ◽  
Vol 3 (1) ◽  
pp. 207
Author(s):  
Shukla Vikas ◽  
Shukla Preety ◽  
Pandey Sanjeev

Author(s):  
Babak Ganjeifar ◽  
Majid Ghafouri ◽  
Azar Shokri ◽  
Farhad Rahbarian Yazdi ◽  
Seyed Ahmad Hashemi

Here we describe a 13- year old patient with the presentation of fever and abdominal pain. He had a history of 2 years headache and seizure. In MRI, a primary cerebral hydatid cyst was evident. The diagnosis of hydatid cyst should beconsidered in children with mentioned characters in endemic regions.


2019 ◽  
pp. 150-155
Author(s):  
Saif Saood Abdelrazaq ◽  
Abdullah H. Al Ramadan ◽  
Ali Adnan Dolachee ◽  
Mohammed Maan AbdulAzeez ◽  
Ali Saud Abdulrazzaq ◽  
...  

Intracranial hydatid cyst involves supratentorial area and mainly affecting the middle cerebral artery territory with the predilection of the partial lobe. It can be single - which is the most common - or multiple up to 35 cysts. They tend to be huge at the time of symptomatic presentation especially when they are presented as a solitary lesion with a slow growth rate around 1.5 cm/year, however, it is variable and it can be up to 10 cm/year. Surgical treatment is mandatory for all patients once the correct diagnosis is made, except for patients with multiple organ involvement in poor general conditions and deep-located cysts. The existence of hydatidosis in the cisternal spaces must not be neglected given the capacity of E. granulosus larvae to disseminate via the CSF. In this case report; two and half years’ male child presented with a history of 2 attacks of generalized seizure for the last 72 hours with the head circumference at the upper normal limit for his age. This paper presents the first case report demonstrating a primary single hydatid cyst located in the quadrigeminal cistern in a child. We concluded that in spite of the feasibility of the imaging and the high suspension of cerebral hydatid cyst, still, the reports show more locations which can be described as unusual although for a head to toe suspected distribution of hydatid disease is already understood. An eminent medical and surgical (if indicated) treatment of the primary cerebral hydatid cyst are always effective and recommended.


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