| Literature DB >> 35291356 |
Mohamed Amine Hadj Taieb1, Kais Maamri1, Amine Trifa1, Ghassen Elkahla1, Mohamed Maher Hadhri1, Mehdi Darmoul1.
Abstract
Remote intracranial hemorrhage is postoperative bleeding that occurs away from the surgical site. Remote cerebellar hemorrhage (RCH) is a cerebellar hemorrhage that may occur in 0.04-0.8% of cases after supratentorial and spinal procedures. We report a case of a 73-year-old male who developed signs of increased intracranial pressure two days after the evacuation of a subdural hematoma. Brain computed tomography showed RCH with the "zebra sign" and triventricular hydrocephalus that indicated the placement of external ventricle drain in emergency. Therefore, surgeons must pay special attention to this rare postoperative complication because it can be devastating in terms of patient outcome especially due to its possible complications requiring surgical treatment. Copyright: Mohamed Amine Hadj Taieb et al.Entities:
Keywords: Postoperative; bleeding; case report; cerebellar hemorrhage; zebra sign
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35291356 PMCID: PMC8895559 DOI: 10.11604/pamj.2022.41.24.32799
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pan Afr Med J
Figure 1A) preoperative axial non-contrast CT scan showing a right-hemispheric acute subdural hematoma with right ventricular compression and midline-shift to the left; B) preoperative cerebellum view showing no abnormalities
Figure 2axial and coronal non-contrast CT scan of the brain on the second postoperative day revealed a cerebellar hemorrhage, dominating in the right cerebellar hemisphere and the vermis