1995
DOI: 10.1016/0090-3019(95)00261-8
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Primary intraventricular hemorrhage in adults: Clinical features, risk factors, and outcome

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Cited by 57 publications
(73 citation statements)
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“…PIVH has been described to have three clinical presentations including sudden profound coma and death within 48 h, sudden focal cerebral dysfunction; and sudden severe headache, drowsiness or confusion without focal neurologic signs [2] In a study by Hameed et al, reported that out of 15 cases of PIVH, nausea and vomiting was noted in 12 (80%) patients, headache in 11 (73%), drowsiness in 8 (53%), cranial nerve palsies in 7 (47%), signs of meningeal irritation in 5 (33%), hemiparesis in 5 (33%) and three(20%) patients were comatose and only one patient had seizures he had past history of stroke [1].…”
Section: Case Historymentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…PIVH has been described to have three clinical presentations including sudden profound coma and death within 48 h, sudden focal cerebral dysfunction; and sudden severe headache, drowsiness or confusion without focal neurologic signs [2] In a study by Hameed et al, reported that out of 15 cases of PIVH, nausea and vomiting was noted in 12 (80%) patients, headache in 11 (73%), drowsiness in 8 (53%), cranial nerve palsies in 7 (47%), signs of meningeal irritation in 5 (33%), hemiparesis in 5 (33%) and three(20%) patients were comatose and only one patient had seizures he had past history of stroke [1].…”
Section: Case Historymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A variety of risk factors have been found associated with PIVH, among hypertension being the most common [1][2][3]7]. Other etiologic factors include arteriovenous malformation (AVM), almost exclusively in patients under 50 years of age, aneurysms, coagulopathies, choroid plexus tumours and cysts, moyamoya disease, arteritis [1,2] and in 25-48% of cases the cause is unknown [3].…”
Section: Case Historymentioning
confidence: 99%
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