Mucoceles are chronic, expanding, mucosa lined pathology of the paranasal sinuses. Frontal mucocele usually presents with the visual complaints such as diplopia, diminution of vision, visual field defect, ptosis, orbital swelling, retro-orbital pain, displacement of eye globe, and proptosis. Very rarely, it can be present as a subcutaneous swelling. This article presents a 58-year-old male patient presenting with an asymptomatic periorbital swelling and a painless forehead mass of 3 years duration. There was a partial ptosis, and an elongated, soft, subcutaneous mass over the forehead. Surgical excision of the mass confirmed the diagnosis of a mucocele. Postoperatively, the patient was asymptomatic. A subcutaneous soft-tissue mass may be the presenting complaint of a frontal mucocele. Careful examination of the surrounding skin may suggest the diagnosis of sinus-related disease and thus direct appropriate investigations.
Ectopic CRF production is biochemically indistinguishable from ectopic ACTH secretion, except that IPSS mimics pituitary Cushing's disease and cortisol dynamics may normalize rapidly postadrenalectomy. CRF secretion can be inferred through tumour immunohistochemistry, even if no CRF assay is available. Unrecognized phaeochromocytoma ACTH secretion may underpin some cases of cardiovascular collapse postadrenalectomy through acute hypocortisolaemia. Despite advances in phaeochromocytoma genetics since previous reports, we were unable to identify somatic DNA defects associated with either ACTH or CRF secretion.
Introduction:Anterior cranial fossa (ACF) defects still remains a reconstructive challenge to neurosurgeons due to the difficult location, inaccessibility, and unfavorable vascular anatomy. Usual reconstructive methods reported complications such as recurrent cerebrospinal fluid leak due to bone resorption and tissue breakdown. This is mainly due to the avascularity of the bone graft and inability to provide bony structural support for the skull base. An ideal reconstructive modality should provide a rigid bony support to prevent brain herniation as well as ensure a water tight barrier between sinonasal tract and intracranial compartment.Methodology:Hence, we thought of a novel technique of taking the outer table of the primary craniotomy flap with its intact myofascial pedicle and moulded it with multiple osteotomies (moulded osteomyofascial pedicled split (MOPS) craniotomy flap) to fit into uneven ACF defects. Advantages of our flap include (1) It is a pedicled vascularized bone flap. (2) It is taken from primary craniotomy flap; hence, no separate craniotomy is required. (3) The inner table is intact and leaves no secondary calvarial bone defect on the donor site. (4) Osteoplastic flap is moulded to fit into the defect, thus providing good contour.Results:MOPS flap was used in five patients with ACF defects due to varied etiologies such as encephalocele defect, frontal mucocele, skull base meningioma, and complex naso ethmoid fracture. Age of the patients included in the study varied from 21 to 60 years. Male:female ratio was 4:1. ACF defects were reconstructed using MOPS flap in all cases. There were no postoperative complications and 1-month postoperative computerized tomography scan showed no evidence of bone resorption with acceptable cosmesis.Conclusion:MOPS craniotomy flap provides a novel, easily mastered, and cost-effective technique with minimal complication in reconstruction of complex ACF defects with acceptable esthetic and functional outcome.
Background: The pressure of the chronic SDH (subdural haemotoma), the age of the patient, preoperative GCS score and midline shift were considered prognostic dependent factors. The study aimed at the significance of the pressure of chronic SDH in the outcome of patients.Methods: A correlation between subdural hematoma pressure and preoperative and postoperative clinical variables such as hematoma volume, midline shift, age, GCS score and postoperative modified ranking scale score as well as complications were assessed and analyzed.Results: According to the pressure of chronic SDH, 56 patients were grouped into 4 groups. In the pressure group <15 cm/h20 group the mean age was 85 and postoperative ranking score was 3 and the recurrence was 21 % while in high pressure group (>25 cm/h20) the mortality was 14% and no recurrence.Conclusions: The pressure of the chronic SDH has significant prognostic value in chronic SDH surgeries.
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