Introduction: Intracerebral hemorrhage is a major public health problem in Africa. The care is well codified in developed nations but the medical outcome and the technical platform remains a thorny challenge in African countries. It is responsible for a heavy handicap and a high mortality. The corpus callosum is an anatomical structure that connects the two cerebral hemispheres and control neuropsychological behavior. The objective was to determine the epidemiological and clinical characteristics of hematomas located in the corpus callosum. Clinical presentation: The stuy was carried out in the neurlogical department of the big tertiary hospital of the country. The study had reported five cases of hematoma of the corpus callosum. That has represented 0.3% of hemorrhagic strokes in the service. The average age was 33.4 years old with four females. Clinical symptoms in the acute phase were dominated by speech disorders, intracranial hypertension and meningeal signs. In the subacute phase, all patients had neuropsychological symptoms. These disorders included aphasia, left tactile anomia, ideomotor and diagonostic apraxia, and mood and behavior disorders in two-third of cases. The brain scan was performed with an average delay of 6 days. In the cerebral scan, the posterior part of the corpus callosum was the initial seat of the hematomas observed in all cases. Cerebrovascular risk factors were high blood pressure in all cases and alcoholism in two cases. The factor of poor prognosis was the association with meningeal contamination. The evolution was favorable in all five cases. Conclusion: This work brings out that hematoma of the corpus callosum is rare but still a serious disease with a misleading semiology dominated by neuropsychological disorders. The early management is the best practice to preserve functional autonomy.
Published in | Clinical Neurology and Neuroscience (Volume 4, Issue 1) |
DOI | 10.11648/j.cnn.20200401.13 |
Page(s) | 11-17 |
Creative Commons |
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution and reproduction in any medium or format, provided the original work is properly cited. |
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Copyright © The Author(s), 2020. Published by Science Publishing Group |
Brain Hematoma, Corpus Callosum, Neuropsychological Disorders, Africa
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APA Style
Komi Assogba, Michel Faustin Tassa-Kayem, Kossivi Martin Apetse, Damelan Kombate, Jean Joel Tajeuna Dongmo, et al. (2020). Hemorrhagic Breakdown of the Cerebral Bridge: A Report of 5 Observations at Lomé Teaching Hospital, Togo. Clinical Neurology and Neuroscience, 4(1), 11-17. https://doi.org/10.11648/j.cnn.20200401.13
ACS Style
Komi Assogba; Michel Faustin Tassa-Kayem; Kossivi Martin Apetse; Damelan Kombate; Jean Joel Tajeuna Dongmo, et al. Hemorrhagic Breakdown of the Cerebral Bridge: A Report of 5 Observations at Lomé Teaching Hospital, Togo. Clin. Neurol. Neurosci. 2020, 4(1), 11-17. doi: 10.11648/j.cnn.20200401.13
AMA Style
Komi Assogba, Michel Faustin Tassa-Kayem, Kossivi Martin Apetse, Damelan Kombate, Jean Joel Tajeuna Dongmo, et al. Hemorrhagic Breakdown of the Cerebral Bridge: A Report of 5 Observations at Lomé Teaching Hospital, Togo. Clin Neurol Neurosci. 2020;4(1):11-17. doi: 10.11648/j.cnn.20200401.13
@article{10.11648/j.cnn.20200401.13, author = {Komi Assogba and Michel Faustin Tassa-Kayem and Kossivi Martin Apetse and Damelan Kombate and Jean Joel Tajeuna Dongmo and Josué Euberma Diatewa and Komi Agbotsou and Abdullah Blakime and Veronique Afiwa Agbobli and Kolou Dassa and Koffi Agnon Ayélola Balogou}, title = {Hemorrhagic Breakdown of the Cerebral Bridge: A Report of 5 Observations at Lomé Teaching Hospital, Togo}, journal = {Clinical Neurology and Neuroscience}, volume = {4}, number = {1}, pages = {11-17}, doi = {10.11648/j.cnn.20200401.13}, url = {https://doi.org/10.11648/j.cnn.20200401.13}, eprint = {https://article.sciencepublishinggroup.com/pdf/10.11648.j.cnn.20200401.13}, abstract = {Introduction: Intracerebral hemorrhage is a major public health problem in Africa. The care is well codified in developed nations but the medical outcome and the technical platform remains a thorny challenge in African countries. It is responsible for a heavy handicap and a high mortality. The corpus callosum is an anatomical structure that connects the two cerebral hemispheres and control neuropsychological behavior. The objective was to determine the epidemiological and clinical characteristics of hematomas located in the corpus callosum. Clinical presentation: The stuy was carried out in the neurlogical department of the big tertiary hospital of the country. The study had reported five cases of hematoma of the corpus callosum. That has represented 0.3% of hemorrhagic strokes in the service. The average age was 33.4 years old with four females. Clinical symptoms in the acute phase were dominated by speech disorders, intracranial hypertension and meningeal signs. In the subacute phase, all patients had neuropsychological symptoms. These disorders included aphasia, left tactile anomia, ideomotor and diagonostic apraxia, and mood and behavior disorders in two-third of cases. The brain scan was performed with an average delay of 6 days. In the cerebral scan, the posterior part of the corpus callosum was the initial seat of the hematomas observed in all cases. Cerebrovascular risk factors were high blood pressure in all cases and alcoholism in two cases. The factor of poor prognosis was the association with meningeal contamination. The evolution was favorable in all five cases. Conclusion: This work brings out that hematoma of the corpus callosum is rare but still a serious disease with a misleading semiology dominated by neuropsychological disorders. The early management is the best practice to preserve functional autonomy.}, year = {2020} }
TY - JOUR T1 - Hemorrhagic Breakdown of the Cerebral Bridge: A Report of 5 Observations at Lomé Teaching Hospital, Togo AU - Komi Assogba AU - Michel Faustin Tassa-Kayem AU - Kossivi Martin Apetse AU - Damelan Kombate AU - Jean Joel Tajeuna Dongmo AU - Josué Euberma Diatewa AU - Komi Agbotsou AU - Abdullah Blakime AU - Veronique Afiwa Agbobli AU - Kolou Dassa AU - Koffi Agnon Ayélola Balogou Y1 - 2020/02/10 PY - 2020 N1 - https://doi.org/10.11648/j.cnn.20200401.13 DO - 10.11648/j.cnn.20200401.13 T2 - Clinical Neurology and Neuroscience JF - Clinical Neurology and Neuroscience JO - Clinical Neurology and Neuroscience SP - 11 EP - 17 PB - Science Publishing Group SN - 2578-8930 UR - https://doi.org/10.11648/j.cnn.20200401.13 AB - Introduction: Intracerebral hemorrhage is a major public health problem in Africa. The care is well codified in developed nations but the medical outcome and the technical platform remains a thorny challenge in African countries. It is responsible for a heavy handicap and a high mortality. The corpus callosum is an anatomical structure that connects the two cerebral hemispheres and control neuropsychological behavior. The objective was to determine the epidemiological and clinical characteristics of hematomas located in the corpus callosum. Clinical presentation: The stuy was carried out in the neurlogical department of the big tertiary hospital of the country. The study had reported five cases of hematoma of the corpus callosum. That has represented 0.3% of hemorrhagic strokes in the service. The average age was 33.4 years old with four females. Clinical symptoms in the acute phase were dominated by speech disorders, intracranial hypertension and meningeal signs. In the subacute phase, all patients had neuropsychological symptoms. These disorders included aphasia, left tactile anomia, ideomotor and diagonostic apraxia, and mood and behavior disorders in two-third of cases. The brain scan was performed with an average delay of 6 days. In the cerebral scan, the posterior part of the corpus callosum was the initial seat of the hematomas observed in all cases. Cerebrovascular risk factors were high blood pressure in all cases and alcoholism in two cases. The factor of poor prognosis was the association with meningeal contamination. The evolution was favorable in all five cases. Conclusion: This work brings out that hematoma of the corpus callosum is rare but still a serious disease with a misleading semiology dominated by neuropsychological disorders. The early management is the best practice to preserve functional autonomy. VL - 4 IS - 1 ER -