| Literature DB >> 35054483 |
Any Docu Axelerad1, Lavinia Alexandra Zlotea2, Carmen Adella Sirbu3, Alina Zorina Stroe1, Silviu Docu Axelerad4, Simona Claudia Cambrea5,6, Lavinia Florenta Muja1.
Abstract
Cerebral venous thrombosis accounts for 0.5-1% of all cerebrovascular events and is one type of stroke that affects the veins and cerebral sinuses. Females are more affected than males, as they may have risk factors, such as pregnancy, first period after pregnancy, treatment with oral contraceptives treatment with hormonal replacement, or hereditary thrombophilia. This neurological pathology may endanger a patient's life. However, it must be suspected in its acute phase, when it presents with variable clinical characteristics, so that special treatment can be initiated to achieve a favorable outcome with partial or complete functional recovery. The case study describes the data and the treatment of two patients with confirmed cerebral venous thrombosis with various localizations and associated risk factors, who were admitted to the neurology department of the Sf. Apostol Andrei Emergency Hospital in Constanta. The first patient was 40 years old and affected by sigmoid sinus and right lateral sinus thrombosis, inferior sagittal sinus, and right sinus thrombosis, associated with right temporal subacute cortical and subcortical hemorrhage, which appeared following a voluntary abortion. The second case was a patient aged 25 who was affected by left parietal cortical vein thrombosis, associated with ipsilateral superior parietal subcortical venous infarction, which appeared following labor. The data are strictly observational and offer a perspective on clinical manifestations and clinical and paraclinical investigations, including the treatment of young patients who had been diagnosed with cerebral venous thrombosis and admitted to the neurology department.Entities:
Keywords: cerebral venous thrombosis; pregnancy; puerperium; voluntary abortion
Year: 2022 PMID: 35054483 PMCID: PMC8780258 DOI: 10.3390/life12010090
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Life (Basel) ISSN: 2075-1729
Figure 1Event flow chart case 1.
Figure 2Cerebral native and contrast-enhanced MRI and angiography, and CT cerebral venography highlighting the sigmoid sinus and right lateral sinus thrombosis and the inferior sagittal sinus and right sinus thrombosis, associated with right temporal cortical and subcortical subacute hemorrhage, supratentorial recent subacute synchronous lacunar infarct, (cytotoxic and vasogenic) thalamic–lenticular–caudal edema, and supratentorial non-specific demyelinating lesions. Magnetic resonance imaging shows cortico-subcortical subacute hemorrhage in the right temporal lobe (a,b) T1 and T2 hyperintensities. (c) methemoglobin signal. (d) heterogeneous contrast enhancement. (e) supratentorial recent subacute lacunar infarction in a millimeter lesion in hypersignal FLAIR, restrictive in diffusion coefficient. (f,g) supratentorial recent subacute lacunar infarction located in the corpus callosum. (h,i,j,k) cytotoxic and vasogenic edema in diffuse T2 and FLAIR high signal and moderate restriction in diffusion coefficient in the left thalamus. (l,m,n,o) cytotoxic and vasogenic edema in left lenticular-caudate nucleus. (p) right sigmoid and lateral sinuses thrombosis—T1 and T2 hyperintense material, without contrast enhancement. The intravenous post-contrast and native cranio-cerebral MRI examination highlights are as follows: oval globular formations with a non-homogeneous central portion and a periphery with a methemoglobin signal, hyper-intense T1–T2, axial dimensions of 11/10 mm maximally and heterogeneous contrast outlet, along with right temporal cortical and subcortical conglomerates, with extended moderate perilesional oedema; FLAIR hyper-intense millimeter lesions, intense and homogeneous restriction in diffusion and no-contrast outlets in the semioval centers, in the corpus callosum and in the middle temporal gyrus; diffuse signal T2–FLAIR increased in the left and left lenticular–caudal thalamus, with minimum diffusion restriction and no detectable contrast outlets; a few T2–FLAIR hyper-signal millimeter outbreaks, with no diffusion restriction and no corresponding T1, located in the white matter in the periventricular hemisphere and bilateral frontal–parietal subcortical area; normal supra- and infratentorial pericerebral liquid spaces; a symmetric ventricular system, with normal dimensions; structures of the median line in normal position; orbits and orbital content without anomalies; and paranasal sinuses with normal development and pneumatization. Magnetic resonance (MR) cerebral arteriography and venography indicated the following: internal carotid arteries symmetrically disposed, with a normal trajectory and caliber; anterior cerebral arteries and normal average bilaterally detached from the internal carotid, with no areas of stenosis or circumscribed dilation, with a homogeneous intralumenal signal; vertebral arteries, basilar artery, upper cerebral arteries and communicating arteries with a normal trajectory and caliber; hyper-intense T1–T2 material, with a no-contrast outlet, which transversely occupied the sinuses and sigmoid on the right side; and a lesion with the same signal characteristics situated along the right sinus and extended towards the inferior sagittal sinus; the rest of the dural sinuses had no detectable lesions in the sequences observed.
Figure 3Event flow chart: Case 2.
Figure 4Native and contrast-enhanced cerebral MRI and angiography with arterial and venous sequencing, performed on the second day of hospitalization. The scan indicates thrombosis of the left parietal cortical vein associated with ipsilateral superior parietal subcortical venous infarction—(a) band in T2 and FLAIR hypersignal. (b) band in T2 and FLAIR hypersignal. (c) T1 hyposignal. (d) restrictive in diffusion coefficient. (e) restrictive in diffusion coefficient. (f) restrictive in diffusion coefficient with weak contrast enhancement. Demyelinating lesions are organized in the crown, radiated and parietal on the right side, most probably with an ischemic vascular sublayer. The native cranio-cerebral and post-contrast MRI examination with arterial and venous angiographic sequencing highlighted the following: normal pericerebral liquid spaces; a symmetric ventricular system, with normal dimensions; an area in the hypersignal band T2, and a FLAIR/iso-hypo signal T1, with restricted diffusion weighing, weak gadolinophilia, axial dimensions of about 9/16 mm, located subcortically and parietally on the upper left side; two millimeter focal points of the T2 and FLAIR hypersignal, with no diffusion restrictions or detectable contrast outlet organized in the crown, radiated and parietal subcortical on the right side, in the area adjacent to the dorsal horn of the VL; structures of the median line in the right position; orbits and orbital content without anomalies; paranasal sinuses with normal development and pneumatization; the absence of images evoking hemorrhagic accumulations or masses with a tumor sublayer; symmetrically disposed internal carotid arteries with normal trajectories and caliber; a normal bilateral carotid siphon with no position or extrinsic compression anomalies, with homogeneous intensity of the intralumenal signal; anterior and middle cerebral arteries that were normally detached from the internal carotid on both sides, without any areas of inferior longitudinal stenosis with an aspect within the normal limits; transverse and symmetric sigmoid sinuses, without lesions; the rest of the patient’s evaluable venous segments did not present any defect in the lumen signal.