Hypertrophic olivary degeneration is a result of a primary lesion damaging the dento-rubro-olivary pathway. It is a transynaptic form of degeneration and is unique, causing hypertrophy rather than atrophy of the inferior olivary nucleus. We report a case of bilateral hypertrophic olivary degeneration following surgical excision of a posterior fossa epidermoid cyst and review the relevant literature.
The value of dynamic CT scanning for staging renal carcinoma was studied prospectively in 28 patients and the results compared with those of ultrasonography, arteriography and conventional CT. Arteriography correctly staged 48% of tumours; ultrasonography and conventional CT correctly staged 50% and dynamic CT correctly staged 72%. Dynamic CT staged renal carcinoma more accurately than ultrasonography, conventional CT or arteriography and it is suggested that arteriography should be restricted to specific indications such as the mapping of arterial anatomy and therapeutic renal artery embolisation.
A 63-year-old woman with diplopia and bilateral ptosis underwent brain MRI that showed a pituitary mass with signal characteristics suggestive of adenoma. Within one week she had developed nearly complete bilateral ophthalmoplegia. A repeat MRI showed extension of the mass into both cavernous sinuses. Hypophysectomy disclosed an amelanotic melanoma. Extensive search for a primary source was unsuccessful. Despite local radiation treatment, the tumor continued to grow and the patient became blind and died within several months of diagnosis. There are seven reported cases of melanoma arising primarily in the sella turcica. Two cases of metastatic melanoma to the cavernous sinuses have been reported. Amelanotic melanoma has not been reported as a cause of cavernous sinus syndrome.
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