Aseptic cerebral sinovenous occlusion: a case report

Authors

  • Verajit Chotmongkol
  • Vallop Laopaiboon
  • Chaichan Deerochanawong
  • Suparp Theerawiroon

Abstract

Asptic intracranial sinovenous occlusion is an uncommon clinical entity.  The typical symptoms are severe headache, vomiting, convulsion, progressive drowsiness, papilledema and focal neurological signs.  It is commonly found in young women taking oral contraceptive pills.  A 29-year-old woman who presented with typical symptoms of cerebral sinovenous occlusion and had history of using oral contraceptive pills was reported.  Computed tomography scan and cerebral angiography showed sagittal sinus thrombosis.  The symptoms were fully recovered by supportive treatment without anticoagulant therapy.

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How to Cite

1.
Chotmongkol V, Laopaiboon V, Deerochanawong C, Theerawiroon S. Aseptic cerebral sinovenous occlusion: a case report. SRIMEDJ [Internet]. 2013 Nov. 11 [cited 2024 Apr. 19];2(3):215-8. Available from: https://li01.tci-thaijo.org/index.php/SRIMEDJ/article/view/13420

Issue

Section

Case report