| Literature DB >> 34295112 |
Sujana Gogineni1, Dhananjay Gupta1, R Pradeep1, Anish Mehta1, Mahendra Javali1, Purshottam T Acharya1, Rangasetty Srinivasa1.
Abstract
Stroke is a common neurological emergency. Almost 80% of strokes are due to arterial occlusion. Venous thrombosis comprises less than 1-2% of all strokes. Involvement of the deep cerebral venous system is still rare and accounts for about 10.9% of all cerebral venous thromboses (CVT). CVT diagnosis is often delayed or missed, because of its variable clinical manifestations. We retrospectively (2015-18) and prospectively (2018-20) reviewed all the cases of CVT in a tertiary care center in south India. Out of a total of 52 CVT cases, 12 were due to the involvement of deep cerebral venous system. Their clinical presentation, imaging characteristics, and outcomes were assessed. The most frequent presentation was headache followed by seizures. Hyperhomocysteinemia was the most common risk factor noted. Imaging characteristics were variable, and a high index of suspicion was required for early diagnosis. All patients had favorable outcome in our study, and except one, all were treated conservatively. Association for Helping Neurosurgical Sick People. This is an open access article published by Thieme under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonDerivative-NonCommercial-License, permitting copying and reproduction so long as the original work is given appropriate credit. Contents may not be used for commercial purposes, or adapted, remixed, transformed or built upon. (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/.).Entities:
Keywords: acute stroke treatment; cerebral venous thrombosis; cerebrovascular disease; neuroimaging; stroke
Year: 2021 PMID: 34295112 PMCID: PMC8289541 DOI: 10.1055/s-0041-1730109
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Neurosci Rural Pract ISSN: 0976-3155
Clinical and radiological features
| S. No | Age (years) | Gender | Clinical presentation | Veins involved | MRI features |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. | 32 | Female | Headache, vomiting, blurring of vision, altered sensorium | Internal cerebral vein, | Thalamus, left internal capsule, left basal ganglia, right caudate, right cerebellar hemorrhagic infarcts |
| 2. | 30 | Male | Headache, vomiting | Vein of Galen, internal cerebral vein, right transverse sinus, straight sinus | Bilateral thalamus infarction with hemorrhage in right thalamus |
| 3. | 53 | Male | Headache, vomiting | Vein of Galen, straight sinus, right transverse, sigmoid sinus, internal jugular vein | Bilateral cerebellar hemorrhage |
| 4. | 22 | Male | Headache | Superior sagittal sinus, right transverse, sigmoid, straight sinus thrombosis, vein of Galen | Right temporal lobe hemorrhagic infarct |
| 5. | 21 | Male | Headache, Seizures | Internal cerebral veins, inferior sagittal sinus, transverse sinus, sigmoid, straight sinus | Bilateral frontal, left thalamus, basal ganglia, left occipital hemorrhagic infarcts |
| 6. | 30 | Female | Headache, Blurring of vision | Vein of Galen, inferior sagittal sinus, straight sinus, bilateral transverse sinus | Right temporal hematoma, callosal, basal ganglia hemorrhagic infarcts |
| 7. | 23 | Female | Headache | Vein of Galen, straight sinus, bilateral transverse, sigmoid sinus | Left temporal venous infarct |
| 8. | 26 | Male | Headache, seizures | Basal vein of Rosenthal, internal cerebral vein, vein of Galen, straight sinus, left transverse and sigmoid sinus | Acute venous infarct in right thalamus, hippocampus |
| 9. | 24 | Male | Headache, vomiting | Vein of Galen, internal cerebral veins, inferior sagittal, transverse and straight sinus | Venous infarct in bilateral thalamus with hemorrhage in left thalamus |
| 10. | 58 | Male | Headache, seizures | Vein of Galen, internal cerebral vein, straight sinus | Right basal ganglia hemorrhagic infarct |
| 11. | 38 | Male | Headache | Left transverse and sigmoid sinus | Left temporal lobe hemorrhagic infarct |
| 12. | 30 | Male | Seizures | Vein of Galen, straight sinus, superior sagittal sinus, transverse and sigmoid sinus | Acute infarct in left basal ganglia |
Fig. 1MRI brain: fluid attenuated inversion recovery (FLAIR) sequence, axial cuts, showing bilateral asymmetrical hyperintensity (right > left) in thalamus with hypointense signal within the right thalamus (patient 2).
Fig. 2MRI brain: susceptibility-weighted imaging (SWI) sequence, axial cuts, showing blooming in right thalamus suggestive of hemorrhage (patient 2).
Fig. 3MRI venogram, time-of-flight (TOF) images showing involvement of vein of Galen, straight sinus, transverse sinus and sigmoid sinus on the right side (patient 2).
Risk factors for cerebral venous thrombosis
| Condition/risk factor | Percentage |
|---|---|
| Hyperhomocysteinemia | 50 |
| Antithrombin III, protein s deficiency, hyperhomocysteinemia | 8.33 |
| Polycythemia | 8.33 |
| Oral contraceptives | 8.33 |
| Iron deficiency anemia | 8.33 |
| Puerperium | 8.33 |
| Unknown | 8.33 |