Incidental finding in a headache patient: Intracranial lipoma
Künye
Bilir, O., Yavasi, O., Ersunan, G., Kayayurt, K., Durakoglugil, T., (2014).Incidental Finding in a Headache Patient: Intracranial Lipoma.Western Journal of Emergency Medicine, 15(4), 361-362.https://doi.org/10.5811/westjem.2014.4.21298Özet
A 60 year old female, with a history of atrial fibrillation who
was on warfarin therapy, presented to our emergency department
with chief complaint of the most severe headache that she ever
had. Her vital signs, systemic and neurological examinations
were normal. She had emergency computed tomography (CT) of
the brain with suspicion of intracranial hemorrhage that revealed
a lesion in fat dansity in the lateral ventricle and interhemispheric
fissure (Figure a). Her international normalized ratio was 3,2.
She underwent cranial magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) that
revealed a hyperintense lesion in T1 and T2 sequances in the
lateral ventricles, pericallosal area and interhemispheric fissure
that did not show contrast enhancement (Figure b and c). After
the symptomatic relief by analgesics she was discharged from
the emergency department for out-patient follow-up