Rathke's cleft cyst is a benign growth found on the pituitary gland in the brain, specifically a fluid-filled cyst in the posterior portion of the anterior pituitary gland. It occurs when the Rathke's pouch does not develop properly, and ranges in size from 2 to 40 mm in diameter. Asymptomatic cysts are common, detected during autopsies of 2–26% of individuals who have died of unrelated causes. Symptomatic cysts are rare and only approximately 150 cases have been reported. Females are twice as likely as males to have a cyst. Symptomatic cysts can trigger visual disturbances, pituitary dysfunction and headaches. Here we present a case of a 40-year-old female patient who presented with complains of visual disturbances, headache and amenorrhoea. On investigations, MRI of brain revealed findings suggestive of Rathke's cleft cyst.
DESCRIPTIONWe report a case of a 17-year-old girl who presented, 1 month after being attacked in a chain snatching incident, with neck trauma, and reports of dysarthria and left-sided facial weakness. The patient neglected initial symptoms of headache and left-sided neck pain, and did not seek medical advice at the time. On examination, she had left facial weakness, absent left forehead wrinkles and deviation of the tongue to the left on protrusion, suggesting left peripheral facial and hypoglossal nerve palsy (figures 1 and 2). All other cranial nerve examination was normal. MR angiography of the neck and brain revealed abrupt occlusion of left internal carotid artery (figure 3), suggesting dissection with thrombosis of left internal carotid artery (ICA). MRI also revealed hyperintensity of the left side of the tongue suggesting denervation oedema due to hypoglossal nerve palsy (figure 4).Cranial nerve palsy in ICA dissection occurs in 3-12% of all patients, mostly involving the lower cranial nerves (IX to XII).1 Isolated VII or isolated XII cranial nerve palsy is rare but has been reported.2 3 However, a combination of both has not been previously known. Our patient had VII and XII cranial nerve palsies. Compression or stretching of the nerve by the expanded artery or interruption of the nutrient vessels supplying the nerve may be the likely cause of the palsy. The ascending pharyngeal artery and the middle meningeal artery supplying the XII and VII nerves, respectively, arise from the external carotid artery, which may be directly affected by dissection or by being compressed by the expanding dissected ICA.
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