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Showing papers on "Intracranial Lipoma published in 1992"


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Surgical extirpation is not necessary in the majority of patients, many of whom show remarkable clinical improvement following shunt procedures for obstructive hydrocephalus (when present) as well as vigorous treatment of co-existing conditions.
Abstract: Intracranial lipomas are very rare lesions, which are probably congenital. Though they can occur anywhere in the intracranial space, a high proportion of cases tend to be ++located around the midline. They are usually asymptomatic. When symptoms do occur, they are frequently the result of co-existing general clinical conditions. Lipomas used to be reported mainly as incidental findings at autopsy, but advances in neuroimaging techniques have greatly improved the likelihood of their being discovered during life. Surgical extirpation is not necessary in the majority of patients, many of whom show remarkable clinical improvement following shunt procedures for obstructive hydrocephalus (when present) as well as vigorous treatment of co-existing conditions.

35 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The aneurysm was successfully clipped following the partial resection of the tumor and the value of cerebral angiography in this disease entity and the possible etiology of the association of an aneurYSm with a lipoma are discussed.
Abstract: v" The afithors present a case of lipoma in the sylvian fissure associated with a saccular aneurysm of the middle cerebral artery. The aneurysm was successfully clipped following the partial resection of the tumor. This is the first reported case of this combined pathology. The value of cerebral angiography in this disease entity and the possible etiology of the association of an aneurysm with a lipoma are discussed.

30 citations


Journal Article
TL;DR: MRI can precisely locate a small lesion that would be overlooked by CT scans and indicate that even subtotal removal can alleviate the symptoms of intracranial lipomas and that favorable results can be obtained.
Abstract: We encountered five cases of intracranial lipoma after introduction of MRI. They were located in the quadrigeminal plate, interpeduncular fossa, pineal region and two of them were found in the cerebellopontine angle, (although intracranial lipoma in this location has been reported to be extremely rare). MRI can precisely locate a small lesion that would be overlooked by CT scans. Operative treatment was performed in two symptomatic cases (CP angle and pineal lesions) and the tumors were subtotally resected. The symptoms of the patients disappeared postoperatively. This indicated that even subtotal removal can alleviate the symptoms of intracranial lipomas and that favorable results can be obtained.

9 citations