Interdisciplinary Neurosurgery (Mar 2015)

Spontaneous subdural hematoma associated to Duret hemorrhage

  • William Alves Martins, MD,
  • Alice Becker Teixeira, MD,
  • Thomas More Frigeri, MD,
  • Eliseu Paglioli, MD, PhD

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.inat.2014.11.003
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 2, no. 1
pp. 13 – 15

Abstract

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Subdural hematoma (SH) is a neurosurgical emergency, usually caused by head trauma. Non-traumatic causes include aneurysm or arterial–venous malformation rupture, coagulopathy and others. We report the case of a 66 year-old man who developed apparently unprovoked signs of increased intracranial pressure. Brain computed tomography scan showed an acute spontaneous SH, surgically treated. Throughout surgery, a ruptured cortical artery with intensive bleeding appeared and was cauterized. After surgery, patient remained comatose and a new CT demonstrated Duret hemorrhage at the brainstem. Acute spontaneous SH of arterial origin is rare and highly lethal, in which a good prognosis relies on early diagnosis and treatment.

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