Journal Information
Vol. 16. Issue 1.
Pages 50-53 (January 2005)
Share
Share
Download PDF
More article options
Vol. 16. Issue 1.
Pages 50-53 (January 2005)
Consumo de cocaína como desencadenante de hemorragia en un oligoastrocitoma
Cocaine abuse as precipitating factor of tumoral bleeding in an oligoastrocitoma
Visits
1909
M. Ortega-Martínez
, J.M. Cabezudo-Artero, L. Fernández-Portales, L.F. Gómez-Perals, L.F. Porras-Estrada
Servicio de Neurocirugía. Hospital Regional Universitario Infanta Cristina. Badajoz
This item has received
Article information
Resumen

El consumo de cocaína ha sido implicado en una serie de efectos sobre el SNC, entre los que destacan los ictus hemorrágicos. Estas hemorragias se producen más frecuentemente en pacientes en que se demuestra patología vascular previa, especialmente aneurismas y malformaciones arteriovenosas (MAV) cerebrales. En nuestra revisión de la literatura, sólo hemos encontrado, hasta el momento, dos casos de hemorragia cerebral inducida por cocaína en que la patología de base haya sido un tumor. Presentamos un nuevo caso de hemorragia cerebral producida pocas horas después del consumo por vía nasal de importantes dosis de cocaína, en el que los estudios preoperatorios así como el estudio anatomopatológico revelaron la existencia de un tumor cerebral como origen de la hemorragia. Consideramos que la cocaína puede ser tomada en cuenta como un nuevo factor precipitarte de hemorragia tumoral.

Palabras clave:
Cocaína
Hemorragia intraparen-quimatosa cerebral
Hemorragia intratumoral
Abreviaturas:
ACV
AVM
HSA
HTA
MAV
TA
Summary

Cocaine abuse has been associated with a variety of intracranial haemorrhagic disorders, such as intracerebral, subdural or subarachnoidal haemor-rhage. Frecuently, these patients harbour underlying vascular malformations, like cerebral aneurysms or arteriovenous malformations (AVM). To the best of our knowledge only two cases of tumoral haemor-rhage induced by cocaine abuse have been previously reported. We describe a new case of intracerebral haemorrhage after cocaine inhalation, in which both the preoperative imaging studies and the pathological examination showed a brain tumour as the origin of the haemorrhage. We think that cocaine abuse may be considered as a new precipitating factor in intratumoral haemorrhage.

Key words:
Intracerebral haemorrhage
Cocaine
Intratumoral haemorrhage

Article

These are the options to access the full texts of the publication Neurocirugía (English edition)
Member
Member of the Sociedad Española de Neurocirugía

If it is the first time you have accessed you can obtain your credentials by contacting Elsevier Spain in suscripciones@elsevier.com or by calling our Customer Service at902 88 87 40 if you are calling from Spain or at +34 932 418 800 (from 9 to 18h., GMT + 1) if you are calling outside of Spain.

If you already have your login data, please click here .

If you have forgotten your password you can you can recover it by clicking here and selecting the option ¿I have forgotten my password¿.

Subscriber
Subscriber

If you already have your login data, please click here .

If you have forgotten your password you can you can recover it by clicking here and selecting the option “I have forgotten my password”
Subscribe
Subscribe to

Neurocirugía (English edition)

Purchase
Purchase article

Purchasing article the PDF version will be downloaded

Price 19.34 €

Purchase now
Contact
Phone for subscriptions and reporting of errors
From Monday to Friday from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. (GMT + 1) except for the months of July and August which will be from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.
Calls from Spain
932 415 960
Calls from outside Spain
+34 932 415 960
Email
Idiomas
Neurocirugía (English edition)
Article options
Tools
es en

¿Es usted profesional sanitario apto para prescribir o dispensar medicamentos?

Are you a health professional able to prescribe or dispense drugs?