From: Familial perimesencephalic subarachnoid hemorrhage: two case reports
Authors | Age | Gender | Complaint at presentation | Risk factors for spontaneous subarachnoid hemorrhage | Follow up | Basal vein of Rosenthal (right/left) | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Tielman et al .[7] | Patient 1 | 51 years | Man | Headache, vomiting, left gaze diplopia | No | No recurrent subarachnoid hemorrhage and no neurological deficits | Type C/Type C |
Patient 2 | 50 years | Woman | Headache, loss of consciousness, vomiting | No | No recurrent subarachnoid hemorrhage and no neurological deficits | Type C/Type C | |
Cikla et al . (this article) | Patient 1 | 39 years | Man | Headache, diplopia, nuchal rigidity | No | No recurrent subarachnoid hemorrhage and no neurological deficits | Type A/Type C |
Patient 2 | 44 years | man | Headache, slight nuchal rigidity | No | no recurrent subarachnoid hemorrhage and no neurological deficits | Type B/Type A |