Unilateral thrombosis of dominant internal jugular vein presenting with benign intracranial hypertension

Authors

  • Ranchini Murgan
  • Sutharshan Sockalingam
  • Khairul Azmi Abd Kadir
  • Khean Jin Goh
  • Visvaraja Subrayan
  • Bee Ping Chong
  • Dharmendra Ganesan

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.54029/2024jwr

Keywords:

internal jugular vein thrombosis, idiopathic intracranial hypertension

Abstract

Idiopathic intracranial hypertension is defined as an elevation of intracranial pressure (ICP) with no identifiable aetiology. The term ‘pseudotumor cerebri’ or BIH, was commonly used in the past for idiopathic intracranial hypertension, but is now used to describe the chronic elevation of ICP regardless of its aetiology and is further divided into primary (idiopathic intracranial hypertension) and secondary forms. We report a rare case of BIH secondary to unilateral dominant internal jugular vein thrombosis.

Author Biographies

Ranchini Murgan

 

 

Sutharshan Sockalingam

 

 

Khairul Azmi Abd Kadir

 

 

Khean Jin Goh

 

 

 

Visvaraja Subrayan

 

 

Bee Ping Chong

 

 

Published

2024-04-02

Issue

Section

Imaging Highlight