- VernacularTitle:分娩中に右尾状核出血を発症した1例
- Author:
Mari SHIBATA
1
;
Ayaka NAGAI
1
;
Yuta KATO
1
;
Keika YAMAUCHI
1
;
Yasushi MATSUKAWA
1
;
Teruko MIZUNO
1
;
Kyoko KUMAGAI
1
;
Naomi KIMURA
1
;
Masahiro IKEUCHI
1
;
Kazuhiro HIGUCHI
1
Author Information
- From:Journal of the Japanese Association of Rural Medicine 2024;72(6):544-548
- CountryJapan
- Language:Japanese
- Abstract: The patient was a 36-year-old primipara with no comorbidities such as diabetes or hypertension. At 35 weeks and 3 days of pregnancy, she was admitted for rupture of membranes. She vomited often during the expulsive stage of labor, so a vacuum extraction was performed. Her vital signs were normal throughout the delivery. She vomited repeatedly after the delivery but did not complain of headache or arm weakness and her level of consciousness was Japan Coma Scale I-1. Head CT revealed right caudate hemorrhage and cerebral ventricular rupture. Head MRI showed no obvious cerebrovascular abnormality, so she was followed up with symptomatic treatment. Recovery was uneventful, without neurological sequelae, and she was discharged on postpartum day 27. Cerebral hemorrhage during pregnancy is caused in many cases by comorbidities such as cerebral aneurysm, cerebral artery malformation, and pregnancyinduced hypertension syndrome. Cerebral hemorrhage may occur in pregnant women with no risk factors, even when their vital signs are stable. It is necessary to pay attention to the appearance of new symptoms, such as vomiting, around the time of delivery.