Brain abscesses are difficult to manage clinically and often result in a poor outcome. Although surgical and medical therapeutics have progressed, there are still challenges that make treating intracranial abscesses problematic. One of these treatment barriers is the poor penetration of intravenous antibiotics to the infection source through the blood-brain barrier. In this case report, we will discuss the use of a surgical drain as a conduit for direct antibiotic administration for a rare, recurrent Streptococcus intermedius infection. This technique allows us to bypass the blood-brain barrier while also reducing the systemic effects of antibiotics. When used in conjunction with craniotomy and resection, direct antibiotic administration via a surgical drain proved to be effective at treating our patient's abscess and preventing recurrence.
Olfactory groove meningiomas are slow-growing tumors that manifest with headaches, changes in vision, and personality changes. The anatomic location of these tumors makes psychiatric disturbances more common early in the stage of tumors than focal neurological deficits. The case study here describes a unique instance of an undiagnosed giant olfactory groove meningioma in a young mother who was charged with a felony of aggravated child abuse for the death of her toddler daughter. The patient underwent gross tumor resection and radiation therapy, which halted the visual decline, resolved the frontal headaches, and the patient showed improved mood. In this patient, the insidious onset of personality changes without obvious focal neurologic deficits until late as well as a history of depression likely contributed to the delayed diagnosis. Failure to notice these initial behavioral manifestations in these patients allows for further psychiatric and cognitive decline, which can result in devastating social consequences.
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