1.Acute Growing Skull Fracture: Case Report.
Jae Young BAN ; Hyung Ki KIM ; Tae Hee RHEU ; Suk Hoon YUN
Journal of Korean Neurosurgical Society 1998;27(5):683-688
Growing skull fracture is a rare complication of injury during infancy and childhood. About 90% of them occur in childhood under the age of 3 years. Growing skull fracture or leptomeningeal cyst was known to be formed through the bony erosion of fractured site by cerebrospinal fluid pulsation of the leptomeninges, impacted into the fractured bone by trauma. Most growing skull fractures are located in the parietal region. A growing fracture commonly presents as a progressive, often pulsatile, scalp mass that appears several months to years after head injury sustained during infancy or early childhood. The authors report a case of acute growing skull fracture in 4-year-old male patient, which developed 3 weeks after fall down injury.
Arachnoid Cysts
;
Cerebrospinal Fluid
;
Child, Preschool
;
Craniocerebral Trauma
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Humans
;
Male
;
Rabeprazole
;
Scalp
;
Skull Fractures*
;
Skull*
2.Asymtomatic Giant Benign Schwannoma Involving Cervical Vertebral Body: A Case Report-.
Jae Young BAN ; Kyung Seup OH ; Young Gyi SHIN ; Hyung Ki KIM ; Tae Hee RHEU ; Jong Soo LEE ; Suk Hoon YOON
Journal of Korean Neurosurgical Society 1999;28(2):273-276
Benign Schwannoma rarely involves the vertebral bodies extensively. Despite of huge amount of neoplastic mass and severe destructive bony changes, the neurologic deficits could not be discovered. The authors discussed the findings of plain X-rays, cervical CT, MRI, pathology as well as surgical procedure, and reviewed the literatures.
Magnetic Resonance Imaging
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Neurilemmoma*
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Neurologic Manifestations
;
Pathology