Results 251 to 260 of about 34,858 (284)
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Pseudo-cerebrospinal fluid rhinorrhea

Journal of Neurosurgery, 1994
✓ Because of its potentially serious sequelae, cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) leakage following surgery for lesions of the cranial base is given immediate attention by neurosurgeons. Despite a multitude of approaches used to prevent its occurrence, CSF leakage complicates up to 30% of difficult skull-base tumor operations.
M D, Cusimano, L N, Sekhar
openaire   +2 more sources

Chronic Spontaneous Cerebrospinal Rhinorrhea

Archives of Internal Medicine, 1961
Introduction The drainage of cerebrospinal fluid from the nose or the ear after certain kinds of fractures of the skull is a well-known, but fortunately not-too-common problem of head trauma. On the other hand, the development of spontaneous drainage of cerebrospinal fluid from the nose is unusual.
W M, ANDERSON, G A, SCHWARZ, G D, GAMMON
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Rhinorrhea with airway obstruction

The Laryngoscope, 1975
AbstractLife endangering airway obstructions have many facets and causes. Rhinorrhea is a symptom whose etiology may be overlooked if an immediate crisis of airway obstruction is present. Unless the cause for the obstruction or rhinorrhea is investigated it may go undetected and continue to present further problems for the patient.
V, Passy, S, Newcron, S, Snyder
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Radiology of cerebrospinal fluid rhinorrhea

American Journal of Roentgenology, 1980
Fifty-one patients with cerebrospinal fluid rhinorrhea were evaluated at the Mayo Clinic from 1974 to 1977. The causes of the leak were fairly even distributed among postoperative, traumatic unrelated to previous surgery, and nontraumatic. The slightly fewer patients with a traumatic cause compared with those reported in most series reflects the ...
E J, Lantz   +3 more
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Nontraumatic Cerebrospinal Fluid Rhinorrhea

Archives of Neurology, 1969
A PATIENT with "spontaneous" rhinorrhea presents an interesting problem in diagnosis and appropriate treatment. Ommaya et al 1 have recently offered a new classification of the disease, which they designate as "nontraumatic cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) rhinorrhea." They subdivide it into high pressure and low pressure types and further classify it as ...
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Rhinorrhea

2023
Nur Yücel Ekici   +2 more
openaire   +1 more source

Cerebrospinal Rhinorrhea

The Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease, 1933
Arthur I. Weil, David R. Womack
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[Spontaneous sphenoidal rhinorrhea].

Neuro-Chirurgie, 1992
We describe the case of a woman, who presents a spontaneous rhinorrhea. The metrizamid computerized tomographic cisternography proves the precise anatomic location of the dural osseous defect, in the left sphenoidal sinus. Transsphenoidal approach terminated the leakage in a single procedure, without shunt.
J L, Berthelot, J M, Colombani, A, Rey
openaire   +1 more source

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