Cartwright Georgina, Bailey B M W, Lane R J M, Messiha A
Department of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery, Kingston Hospital, Westminster, London, UK.
BMJ Case Rep. 2010 Nov 23;2010:bcr0720103167. doi: 10.1136/bcr.07.2010.3167.
A 21-year-old man presented to the accident and emergency department at St Peter's Hospital, London, in September 2008. Following consumption of alcohol, the patient had been assaulted and had experienced facial trauma. Later, the patient had a witnessed generalised tonic-clonic seizure and the next day noted weakness of the right leg. A CT scan of the brain revealed a solitary lesion in the left presylvian region close to the vertex, involving the leg area of the primary motor cortex. A subsequent MRI scan showed the lesion to be a cavernous haemangioma. The patient had no history of epilepsy. This raised the question as to whether the assault caused the lesion to haemorrhage, resulting in the seizure and spastic monoparesis, or did the formerly asymptomatic cavernoma bleed spontaneously with the assault being coincidental?
2008年9月,一名21岁男子前往伦敦圣彼得医院的急诊科就诊。该患者在饮酒后遭到袭击,面部受到创伤。随后,患者出现了一次全身性强直阵挛发作,次日发现右腿无力。脑部CT扫描显示,在靠近头顶的左侧颞叶前区有一个孤立性病变,累及初级运动皮层的腿部区域。随后的MRI扫描显示该病变为海绵状血管瘤。患者既往无癫痫病史。这就引发了一个问题,即此次袭击是导致病变出血,进而引发癫痫发作和痉挛性单瘫,还是原本无症状的海绵状血管瘤自发出血,而袭击只是巧合?