| Literature DB >> 32922908 |
Qingyuan Liu1,2,3, Jun Wu1,2,3, Chunde Li1, Shuo Wang1,2,3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Cranial hemophilic pseudotumor (cHPT) is a very rare disease, which is easy to misdiagnose. It is also difficult to manage such patients. We reported the first case of occipital cHPT. CASEEntities:
Keywords: Diagnosis strategy; Hemophilic pseudotumor; One-stage cranioplasty; Perioperative management; Replacement treatment
Year: 2019 PMID: 32922908 PMCID: PMC7398374 DOI: 10.1186/s41016-019-0155-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Chin Neurosurg J ISSN: 2057-4967
Fig. 1a MRA showed a poor arterial supply (yellow arrow). The artery closest to the lesion is located outside the lesion (red arrow). b CT suggested an irregular destruction of the occipital bone and small cysts within the lesion. c MRV showed the left transverse sinus was blocked totally (yellow arrow). d The postoperative CT was negative, no obvious sign of bleeding. e Pathological examination found “giant cells” around the cysts (green arrow), which should be hemosiderin-laden macrophages. We can see that these cells are scattered within the lesions (yellow arrow). f There were numerous cystic spaces (blue arrow) containing bloody fluid (red arrow) in the lesion, which is easily mistaken as an ABC
Fig. 2a After puncturing, a compression caused by epidural hematoma was found on CT (yellow arrow). b Postoperative CT found a hematoma (24 h after surgery). c The mesh was fixed well. d Four days after surgery, hematoma was obviously absorbed. e, f Three months of surgery, the mesh was well fixed, no bleeding and subcutaneous hydrops
The result of literature review about cases of hemophilic pseudotumor
| First author | Year | Deficit factor | Location | Size | Traumatic history |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Killby D [ | 1972 | VIII | Temporal | 5–6 cm | Y |
| Horton DD [ | 1993 | VIII | Parietal | Non | Y |
| Sim KB [ | 1996 | VIII | Parietal | 5 × 2 cm | Y |
| Conde F [ | 2006 | VIII | Parietal | 5 × 3 cm | N |
| Inoue T [ | 2008 | IX | Frontal | > 3 cm | N |
| Zafar T [ | 2008 | VIII | Frontal | 20 × 16 cm | Y |
| Kashiwazaki [ | 2012 | VIII | Temporal | Non | N |
| Zhang [ | 2014 | VIII | Bi-temporal | Non | Y |
| Our present case | 2017 | VIII | Occipital | 9 cm | Y |
Fig. 3a Our diagnosis experience was summarized here. Once encountering suspicious patients, the patient should first be identified with a trauma history and complete the radiological examination (mainly CT and angiogram). Coagulation examination is not only helpful for the diagnosis of hemophilia, but also for the diagnosis of hemophilic pseudotumor. The key point of pathological examination is to distinguish hemosiderin-laden macrophages from giant cells. b Our perioperative management experience was summarized here. Monitoring of the coagulation condition should be carried out throughout the perioperative management. The key point for preoperative stage is coagulation correction, and the key point for postoperative stage is timely replacement treatment and less invasive examination/treatment