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EIGHT CASES OF TUBERCULOMA OF THE BRAIN FOUND AT NECROPSY

HENRY W. FERRIS, M.D.
JAMA. 1929;92(20):1670-1674. doi:10.1001/jama.1929.02700460026009.
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Discussions concerning tuberculosis of the localized type known as tuberculoma or solitary tubercle, as distinguished from the more diffuse meningeal involvement, have appeared frequently in recent literature. As there is some variation in the data presented with reference to the single occurrence of these lesions, and their sites of location, it is thought worth while to present several cases of intracranial tuberculoma which have been observed in the necropsy service of the New Haven Hospital, and to contrast these cases with those already reported. In 1,699 consecutive postmortem examinations, 809 of which included the cranial contents, tuberculous meningitis was present thirty-four times. Of these, there were eight in which gross involvement of the brain substance was seen. The cerebrum alone was involved once, the cerebrum and the cerebellum four times, the cerebrum and pons once, the cerebrum, cerebellum and pons once, and the pons alone once. Four of the patients

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