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Featured researches published by A. El Ouahabi.
Neurochirurgie | 2010
F. Lakhdar; Y. Arkha; A. El Ouahabi; A. Melhaoui; L. Rifi; S. Derraz; A. El Khamlichi
OBJECTIVE Intracranial meningiomas are very rare in children, comprising only 0.4 to 4.1% of pediatric tumors and only 1.5 to 1.8% to all intracranial meningiomas. The goal of this study of pediatric meningiomas was to establish their epidemiological profile as well as their clinical and radiological features, to assess the long-term outcome, and compare this result with adult meningioma. PATIENT AND METHODS We conducted a retrospective study from June 1983 to June 2007; during this period 521 patients underwent surgery for primary meningioma at the Rabat Hospital, Department of Neurosurgery. Twenty-one patients were under 16 years of age (4%). The clinical charts and imaging data were reviewed. RESULTS The mean age was 10.3 years (range: 2 to 16 years), with 13 boys and eight girls. In one patient a neurofibromatosis was associated. The mean delay to diagnosis was 4.6 months (range: 1 to 12 months). The most common clinical sign was raised intracranial pressure (90%). Of the meningiomas diagnosed, 47% were convexity meningiomas while 24% were parasagittal and 19% were skull-base meningiomas; in two cases (9.5%) the location was intraventricular. The mean tumor diameter was 6.6 cm (range: 3 to 10 cm). A large cystic component was found in 24% of the cases. Surgery achieved a Simpson grade I resection in 47%; 62% of the tumors were grade I and 24% were grade II based on World Health Organization pathological classification. The mean follow-up period was 33 months (range: 6 to 120 months). The recurrence rate was 33%. CONCLUSION Pediatric meningiomas are larger than those found in the adult population; there is a male predominance with high incidence of a cystic component and high-grade meningiomas, thus explaining the increased recurrence rate despite the multimodal treatment.
Journal of Clinical Neuroscience | 2009
M. Boutarbouch; Y. Arkha; A. El Ouahabi; S. Derraz; A. El Khamlichi
Aspergillosis of the sphenoid sinus is rare in immunocompetent patients. It may be mistaken for a sellar region tumor. A 65-year-old, human immunodeficiency virus-negative man presented with a 3-week history of cranial nerve III paresis and visual deterioration. The patient had a long-term history of tobacco snuff abuse. CT scans and MRI demonstrated a space-occupying lesion of the sellar and sphenoid sinus region. Presumptive diagnosis of pituitary macroadenoma was made and the patient was operated on via a transnasal-transsphenoidal approach. After the sphenoid sinus was opened, a yellow-brownish gluey material with crumbly debris extruded and was aspirated. The dura was intact. Histopathology revealed numerous Aspergillus hyphae without tissue invasion. Postoperatively, the cranial nerve III paresis resolved in a few days and visual acuity improved. Sphenoid sinus aspergillosis should be included in the differential diagnosis of sellar region processes, even in immunocompetent patients. Early diagnosis and transsphenoidal removal provides good results without the need for systemic antifungal therapy in non-invasive aspergillosis.
Revue De Stomatologie Et De Chirurgie Maxillo-faciale | 2010
Y. Arkha; Salma Benazzou; Amal Harmouch; S. Derraz; A. El Ouahabi; A. El Khamlichi
INTRODUCTION Fibrous dysplasia is a benign, idiopathic, fibro-osseous disease. CLINICAL CASE A 17-year-old girl had presented with left proptosis for the previous two years, associated to homolateral hemicranial pain. Clinical examination was normal except for non-reducible axile exophthalmia. Computed tomography and magnetic resonance imaging of the head revealed an extensive cystic tumor of the left fronto-ethmoido-sphenoidal region, with compression of the left frontal lobe and medial orbital wall. The radiological appearance suggested a mucocele but histological examination, after surgery, proved a fibrous dysplasia. DISCUSSION Fibrous dysplasia with fronto-sphenoido-ethmoidal localization may be misdiagnosed as mucocele. Histology proves the diagnosis.
Neurochirurgie | 2014
C. Karekezi; M. Boutarbouch; B.O. Djoubairou; A. Melhaoui; Y. Arkha; A. El Ouahabi
Infundibular dilatations (IFDs) are conical, triangular, or funnel-shaped enlargements at the origin of cerebral arteries, and they are primarily located (7-25%) on the posterior communicating artery (PComA). Progression over time into a saccular aneurysm with a risk of rupture of a previously demonstrated IFD has rarely been reported. We report the case of a 60-year-old female who presented 10 years earlier with a subarachnoid hemorrhage caused by a left internal carotid artery aneurysm rupture. At that time, the carotid angiography showed the left internal carotid artery aneurysm and a right posterior communicating artery infundibular dilatation. Neck clipping for the left internal carotid artery aneurysm was performed and the patient was discharged with no neurological deficit. Ten years later, the patient suffered a second fatal subarachnoid hemorrhage; carotid angiography revealed a right posterior communicating artery aneurysm developed from the previously documented infundibular dilatation with a de novo right anterior choroidal artery aneurysm. This case is another proof of the small but growing number of examples of infundibular transformation over time, as well as their risk of progression into saccular aneurysms and subsequent rupture.
Rivista Di Neuroradiologia | 2010
A. Sqalli Houssaini; A. Ouazzani; B. El Abdi; H. Benchaaboune; El Hassani; N. Chakir; H. Belfquih; Y. Arkha; S. Derraz; A. El Ouahabi; A. El Khamlichi; M. Jiddane
This paper discusses spinal cord tumors including imaging characteristics with emphasis on magnetic resonance imaging and advances in treatment. This is a retrospective study of 20 cases patients with neoplasms arising from the spinal cord. All of our cases were explored by magnetic resonance imaging (1.5T) using T1-weighted imaging (Spin Echo), T2-weighted imaging (Spin Echo) and T1-weighted imaging with Gadolinium administration. Pain is the earliest symptom, characteristically occurring at night when the patient is supine. Ependymoma were observed in 11 cases. Astrocytoma was noted in five cases. Other uncommon tumors were identified in four cases: oligodendroglioma (n=1), epidermoid cyst (n=1), hemangioblastoma and metastasis (n=1). In MRI most tumors are isointense or slightly hypointense compared to the normal cord signal with homogenous or irregular enhancement. We describe the characteristic magnetic resonance findings and differential diagnosis of spinal cord tumors. Spinal cord lesions comprise approximately 2–4% of all central nervous system neoplasms. Magnetic resonance imaging plays a central role in the imaging of spinal cord neoplasms.
Feuillets De Radiologie | 2006
Rachid Gana; F Moufid; M. Fikri; S. Derraz; A. El Ouahabi; Mohamed Jiddane; A. El Khamlichi
Resume Les auteurs rapportent l’observation d’un rare cas d’osteoblastome du sacrum revele par une sciatique S1 droite chez un homme âge de 31 ans. Le diagnostic a ete possible grâce a l’imagerieet a la biopsie scannoguidee. Le resultat du traitement chirurgical est satisfaisant apres un reculde trois ans.
Archive | 1991
A. El Khamlichi; A. M. Khamlichi; D. Moussaif; A. El Ouahabi; A. Aghzadi
The most frequent tumors of the sella turcica region are certainly the pituitary adenomas, craniopharyngiomas, and meningiomas. However, while reviewing our 101 patients operated on during the 5 years from 1983 to 1987, we found some histological forms which are rarely reported in the literature: the epidermoid cyst, chordoma, eosinophilic granuloma, myeloplax tumor, and rhabdomyosarcoma. The following observations regarding these rare tumors illustrate the anatomoclinical aspects and the therapeutic problems.
Neurochirurgie | 2012
F. Lakhdar; Y. Arkha; S. Derraz; A. El Ouahabi; A. El Khamlichi
Neurochirurgie | 2011
K. Quenum; Oumar Coulibaly; Y. Arkha; S. Derraz; A. El Ouahabi; A. El Khamlichi
Neurochirurgie | 2011
K. Quenum; Oumar Coulibaly; Y. Arkha; S. Derraz; A. El Ouahabi; A. El Khamlichi