Journal of Research in Medical Sciences (Jan 2011)

Is Chiari malformation a cause of systemic hypertension and sinus bradycardia? A case report and literature review

  • Majid Ghasemi,
  • Khodayar Golabchi,
  • Vahid Shaygannejad,
  • Majid Rezvani

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 16, no. 1
pp. 115 – 118

Abstract

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A middle aged woman, having a history of diastolic hypertension and sinus bradycardia since one year ago, was re-ferred to our center with a sudden occipital headache after shouting. To evaluate the cause of headache the brain MRI was performed reporting a slight cerebellar tonsillar herniation of about one centimeter below the foramen magnum. After the patient was diagnosed to have type I Chiari malformation, a surgery procedure was done and the symptoms were recovered after that. Type I Chiari malformation is a disease mostly caused by congenital displacement of cerebellar tonsils through the fo-ramen magnum. The most common symptom is headache, rarely reported with hypertension or sinus bradycardia.

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