Show pageBacklinksCite current pageExport to PDFBack to top This page is read only. You can view the source, but not change it. Ask your administrator if you think this is wrong. In his serially published atlas of pathology, Anatomie Pathologique du Corps Humain (1829-1842), French anatomist and pathologist Jean Cruveilhier (1791-1874) provided an early clinical-pathologic description of [[Dyke-Davidoff-Masson syndrome]]. Cruveilhier's case was initially published around [[1830]], more than a century before the clinical and radiologic report of Dyke and colleagues in 1933 based on a series of patients studied with [[pneumoencephalography]]. Although Dyke and colleagues were apparently unaware of Cruveilhier's prior description, Cruveilhier's case manifested all of the key osseous and neuropathological features of Dyke-Davidoff-Masson syndrome as later elaborated by Dyke and colleagues: (1) cerebral hemi[[atrophy]] with ex vacuo dilation of the [[lateral ventricle]], (2) ipsilateral thickening of the [[diploƫ]] of the [[skull]], and (3) ipsilateral hyper-[[pneumatization]] of the [[frontal sinus]]es. In addition, Cruveilhier noted crossed cerebral-[[cerebellar atrophy]] in his case and correctly inferred a "crossed effect" between the involved cerebral [[hemisphere]] and the contralateral [[cerebellum]]. Cruveilhier's pathological case from 1830 clearly anticipated both the cases reported more than a century later by Dyke and colleagues based on pneumoencephalography and the more recent [[case report]]s recognized with [[computed tomography]] or [[magnetic resonance imaging]] ((Lanska DJ. Cruveilhier's Unrecognized Case (c1831) of Dyke-Davidoff-Masson Syndrome. Eur Neurol. 2021;84(4):300-306. doi: 10.1159/000515808. Epub 2021 May 7. PMID: 33965957.)). dyke-davidoff-masson_syndrome.txt Last modified: 2024/06/07 02:56by 127.0.0.1