• 320 mg Iodine/mL) angiocardiography (left ventriculography and selective coronary arteriography), peripheral arteriography, visceral arteriography, and cerebral arteriography. (livealthbiopharma.net.in)
  • Ultravist 240 Injection is used as contrast media in cerebral arteriography. (com.pk)
  • We report our experience with the intrathecal use of Gd-DTPA for MR cisternography and ventriculography in pediatric patients referred for study and treatment of complex CSF-related diseases. (ajnr.org)
  • Although the ganglionic portion of the trigeminal nerve could be indirectly located using cisternography, deep brain targets required air or positive contrast ventriculography. (surgicalneurologyint.com)
  • iii) Syncope, or near syncope, due to inadequate cerebral perfusion from any cardiac cause, such as obstruction of flow or disturbance in rhythm or conduction resulting in inadequate cardiac output. (socialsecurityprofessionals.com)
  • 20 of them had evidence of cerebral intraventricular hemorrhage. (nih.gov)
  • Originally described by Walter Dandy in 1918 as a way to perform ventriculography via occipital approach. (wikipedia.org)
  • In complex hydrocephalus or intraventricular cysts, ventriculography Gd-DTPA MR imaging helped to differentiate isolation of a ventricle or noncommunicating cyst in all 4 patients. (ajnr.org)
  • Allow sufficient time to elapse between each injection to avoid possible hemodynamic disturbances when large individual volumes are administered, as in ventriculography and aortography. (drugs.com)
  • A thin membrane that lines the CEREBRAL VENTRICLES and the central canal of the SPINAL CORD . (nih.gov)
  • Cerebral aqueduct: A narrow conduit or passage between the third and fourth ventricles located in the midbrain. (chiariproject.org)
  • Cerebral spinal fluid: Fluid occupying the ventricles of the brain, subarachnoid space of the meninges, and the central canal of the spinal cord. (chiariproject.org)
  • Cerebral hemisphere: One of the large paired structures that together constitute the cerebrum of the brain. (chiariproject.org)
  • After the first report of Gd-DTPA for ventriculography in 2 adult patients with meningeal carcinomatosis, 3 several other cases were reported in personal communications and different publications. (ajnr.org)
  • Il s'agit d'une étude rétrospective descriptive et analytique, multicentrique portant sur des patients de moins de 5ans pris en charge pour une affection neurochirurgicale de Janvier 2019 à Décembre 2021 à Libreville. (bvsalud.org)
  • For angiography throughout the cardiovascular system, including cerebral and peripheral arteriography, coronary arteriography and ventriculography, pediatric angiocardiography, selective visceral arteriography and aortography, peripheral venography (phlebography), and adult and pediatric intravenous excretory urography and intravenous adult and pediatric contrast enhancement of computed tomographic (CECT) head and body imaging. (renalandurologynews.com)
  • He was also the pioneer of neuroradiological investigation in Brazil and the first to perform ventriculography (1924) and cerebral angiography (1928). (sbhmhistoriadamedicina.com)
  • In 1976 transfemoral cerebral angiography was started by Dr S K Pandya. (bvsalud.org)
  • Thirty-two patients without AS who underwent coronary angiography and ventriculography served as controls. (medscape.com)
  • however, cerebral angiography is rarely used in the evaluation of an encephalocele. (medscape.com)
  • Angiocardiography (left ventriculography and selective coronary arteriography), peripheral arteriography, visceral arteriography, and cerebral arteriography (320 mg Iodine/mL). (nih.gov)
  • Originally described by Walter Dandy in 1918 as a way to perform ventriculography via occipital approach. (wikipedia.org)
  • The procedure is performed in individuals suffering from certain health conditions like cerebral, peripheral, and cardiovascular diseases. (practo.com)
  • The essential technological innovations that provided for the first significant developments in modern neurosurgery were the evolutionary progression of general surgery, especially the introduction of anesthesia (Morton, 1846), antisepsis (Lister, 1867), and the theory of the cerebral localization (Broca, 1861)10. (sbhmhistoriadamedicina.com)
  • Of the 101 AS patients who had retrograde catheterization of the aortic valve, 22% manifested new focal diffusion abnormalities consistent with acute cerebral embolic events after the procedure, but only three of these patients (3%) had clinically apparent neurologic deficits. (medscape.com)
  • He was the first Brazilian to go beyond trauma surgery to undertake the surgical treatment of cerebral tumors. (sbhmhistoriadamedicina.com)
  • Surgical interventions on the skull carried out before the appearance of modern medicine in the middle of the 19th century were almost totally limited to the treatment of fractures of the skull and the drainage of possible extra cerebral hematomas and associated festering collections 1,12. (sbhmhistoriadamedicina.com)
  • In the first three decades of the 20th century, cases of head injury and cerebral abscess were operated on by general surgeons in the principal medical centers of Brazil. (sbhmhistoriadamedicina.com)
  • The electrode inserted into the STN and its adjacent structures was superimposed on our 3D-Subthalamus atlas based on intraoperative third ventriculography in 11 cases. (hindawi.com)
  • [1] [2] This technique relies on the fact that cerebral blood flow and neuronal activation are coupled. (wikipedia.org)