Abstract
Symptomatic intracranial hemorrhage (ICH) in term infants is not common, but when it occurs it is usually secondary to trauma, coagulation disorders and/or hypoxia. The possibility of a structural cause for an infantile ICH is unfortunately not seriously considered until very late. In this paper we report the cases of five full-term infants, each of whom developed ICH secondary to a structural lesion during the 1st year of life. Three presented during the newborn period. A congenital saccular aneurysm of the middle cerebral artery in an 8-month old male infant; a posterior fossa arteriovenous malformation in a 2-week old female neonate; a deep parietal cavernous angioma in a 6.5-month-old male infant; a temporoparietal low-grade astrocytoma in a 12-day old male neonate and a temporoparietal desmoplastic ganglioglioma in a 9-day-old male neonate were the structural lesions that were causative for hemorrhage. In all cases but one, the diagnosis was reached by computerized tomography and/or magnetic resonance imaging. All infants underwent surgery for the removal of the hematoma and of the lesion causative for the bleed. All are alive at 19, 3, 11.5, 10, and 5 years, respectively. We discuss the diagnosis of ICH with special emphasis on contemporary imaging modalities and stress the benefits of aggressive and timely surgical treatment. We then consider a concise analysis of the world literature on the occurrence of structural causes of ICH during infancy.
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Received: 5 November 1995 Revised: 19 January 1996
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Tekkök, I., Ventureyra, E. Spontaneous intracranial hemorrhage of structural origin during the first year of life. Child's Nerv Syst 13, 154–165 (1997). https://doi.org/10.1007/s003810050061
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s003810050061