A case of intracranial mixed malignant germ cell tumor (GCT) in a patient with the Klinefelter syndrome (KS) is reported. Extragonadal GCTs, including those of intracranial origin, have previously been noted in KS patients. A review of the English literature suggests that although this phenomenon is rare, there appears to be more than a coincidental relationship between GCTs and a 47, XXY karyotype. This case represents the sixth reported case of intracranial GCT in KS but the first to be histologically confirmed to have mixed malignant germ cell elements. This occurrence of malignant cell types in a KS patient emphasizes the need for a histologic diagnosis prior to initiation of therapy.
Previous clinical studies of blunt trauma patients with severe brain injuries have demonstrated that emergency department vital signs failed to consistently identify life-threatening abdominal injury. One hypothesis to explain this is that bradycardia and systemic hypertension from brainstem injury (the Cushing response) may mask the tachycardia and hypotension ordinarily manifested by hemorrhagic hypovolemia. This would result in inappropriately normal or near-normal emergency department vital signs for otherwise clinically apparent hypovolemia. To test this hypothesis, splenectomized dogs (n = 9) were phlebotomized to a systolic blood pressure (SBP) of 60 mm Hg. Subsequently, intracranial pressure (ICP) was artificially elevated in a controlled, incremental fashion. From a mean SBP of 58.4 +/- 3.9 mm Hg at a baseline ICP of 8.1 +/- 4.2 mm Hg, increases in ICP of only 20 mm Hg significantly raised SBP (in some animals). When ICP reached 70 mm Hg, mean SBP reached 95.1 +/- 8.7 mm Hg (p < 0.001) in spite of profound hemorrhagic hypovolemia. In all subjects, the tachycardia that accompanied hypovolemia tended towards normal with incremental increases in ICP. However, this did not reach statistical significance. In response to elevations in ICP, this hypovolemic canine model displayed normalization of SBP with variable changes in heart rate. These changes could mask hemorrhagic hypotension in humans sustaining multiple system trauma. These experimental data support clinical studies advocating immediate definitive abdominal evaluation in unconscious blunt trauma patients, regardless of vital signs.
Most trauma directors consider MR important in the acute evaluation of spinal trauma and, to a lesser extent, for traumatic brain injury. Despite these opinions, the vast majority of these centers reported only "rare" to "occasional" use of MR in the setting of acute CNS trauma. Our results show that most TCs have on-site and continuously available MR facilities capable of cardiac and pulmonary monitoring. Other factors such as the higher relative cost of MR may be responsible for the discrepancy between the perceived value and the actual utilization of MR imaging in the setting of CNS trauma.
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