1,721,003 research outputs found

    The role of MRI in dementia.

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    Review. Neuroimaging techniques aimed at studying structural changes of the brain may provide useful information for the diagnosis and the clinical management of patients with dementia. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) may show abnormalities amenable to surgical treatment in a significant percentage of patients with cognitive impairment. MRI may also assist the differential diagnosis in dementia associated with metabolic or inflammatory diseases.MRI has the potential to detect focal signal abnormalities which may assist the clinical differentiation between Alzheimer's disease (AD) and vascular dementia (VaD). Severe temporal atrophy, hyperintensities involving the hippocampal or insular cortex, and gyral hypointense bands are more frequently noted in AD. Basal ganglionic/thalamic hyperintense foci, thromboembolic infarctions, confluent white matter and irregular periventricular hyperintensities are more common in VaD. The high sensitivity of MRI in detecting T2 hyperintense lesions and the low specificity off white matter lesions have resulted in a poor correlation between MRI findings and both neuropathological and clinical manifestations. In particular, MRI has disclosed a series of white matter focal changes in the elderly population, which are not necessarily associated with cognitive dysfunction. The recent advent of a new MRI method sensitive to the microstructural changes of white matter, the so-called diffusion tensor imaging, may be helpful in correlating clinical manifestations with white matter abnormalities

    Relationship between supratentorial arachnoid cyst and chronic subdural hematoma: neuroradiological evidence and surgical treatment.

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    Arachnoid cysts are relatively common congenital intracranial mass lesions that arise during the development of the meninges. They can be complicated by the formation of an ipsilateral chronic subdural hematoma (CSDH) after minor cranial trauma. Treatment of these coexisting conditions remains controversial. In this study the authors describe the anatomical, clinical, and neuroradiological features and outcome in a series of patients whose CSDH associated with arachnoid cysts were managed surgically by draining the hematoma alone and leaving the cyst intact. The authors based this surgical management on histological and neuroradiological observations concerning these associated medical conditions. A series of 8 patients with CSDHs associated with arachnoid cysts underwent surgery to drain the hematoma though a bur hole. The arachnoid cyst was left intact. Postoperative follow-up included CT scanning and T1- and T2-weighted MR imaging. Results. Clinical, anatomical, and radiological observations suggest that because separate membranes cover arachnoid cysts and the related hematoma, arachnoid cysts remain unaffected by the subdural bleeding. In the present study, these observations received support from the neuroimaging appearances, suggesting that arachnoid cysts related to hematoma contained only blood breakdown products from the hematoma that had filtered through the reciprocal dividing membranes

    Sporadic Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease without dementia at onset: clinical features, laboratory tests and sequential diffusion MRI (in an autopsy-proven case)

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    Abstract A rapidly progressing dementia, followed by focal neurological signs, and evidence of periodic sharp wave complexes (PSWC) in the EEG may lead to the clinical suspicion of Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (CJD). Different clinical variants of CJD have been described in the past, with prominent extrapyramidal or occipital lobe involvement, all included in the sporadic form of CJD (sCJD). Familiar and iatrogenic forms of CJD are also known. More recently a new variant has been described, vCJD, casually linked to bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE) and it has attracted increasing attention toward each form of rapidly progressing dementia; likewise the differential diagnosis between sCJD vs. vCJD is not always easy. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) too seems to have a peculiar role in differentiating sCJD from vCJD, even if the role of MRI in the diagnosis of CJD is still debated. Diffusion MRI is expected to play an important role in the clinical setting of CJD, contributing to formulation of an early diagnosis, especially in cases with unusual clinical presentation. In fact, the sensitivity of diffusion MRI is superior to that of conventional MRI (T1, T2, FLAIR) in detecting specific basal ganglia and cortical abnormalities early in the course of CJD and these abnormalities correlate well with areas of the most severe and characteristic neuropathological changes. We describe a case of autopsy-proven sCJD, with an unusual clinical course without dementia as a presenting symptom and discuss the role of diffusion MRI and laboratory tests in making an early diagnosis

    Neurovascular headache and occipital neuralgia secondary to bleeding of bulbocervical cavernoma

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    It has recently been suggested that the trigeminocervical complex plays a crucial role in the pathophysiology of neck discomfort that accompanies migraine attacks. Clinical and neurophysiological data have shown that pain within the occipital area may be transmitted by the first trigeminal branch, which supports an anatomical and functional link between cervical and trigeminal modulation of peripheral afferents. We describe a patient with an acute symptomatic migraine attack and chronic occipital neuralgia, both due to bleeding of a bulbocervical cavernoma. The clinical presentation is also discussed and related to recent scientific data on the role of the trigeminocervical complex in both the clinical picture and underlying pathophysiological mechanisms of cervical and head pain. © Blackwell Publishing Ltd, 2007

    Diffuse axonal injury with selective involvement of the corticospinal tract. A diffusion tensor imaging case study

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    The identification of diffuse axonal injury (DAI) can be difficult, especially using conventional imaging (CT or MRI), which usually appears normal. Diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) is useful in identifying white matter abnormalities in patients with DAI. We describe the case of a 17-year-old female with severe closed head injury and right-side hemiparesis, studied with DTI and MR-tractography. In this case, DTI was useful to detect focal and diffuse signs of DAI

    [Usefulness of selective partial inversion recover (SPIR) sequences in optic nerve diseases].

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    To evaluate the yield of SPIR sequences with fat suppression in the diagnosis of optic nerve lesions. Ten patients with suspected optic nerve involvement on the basis of clinical data and abnormalities of visual evoked potentials were examined. MRI was performed with a 1.5 T unit (Philips NT 15) using T1 weighted conventional spin-echo and T1- and T2 weighted SPIR sequences with fat suppression. Axial images were obtained along the optic nerve course, while coronal images throughout the optic nerve axis; slices were 3 mm thick. Axial T2 weighted SPIR sequences were also performed with the volumetric technique (1.5 mm thickness); coronal and parasagittal reconstructions along the nerve axis were obtained too. After paramagnetic contrast medium injection, conventional T1 weighted and SPIR sequences were performed on axial and coronal planes. Optic nerve lesions consistent with the diagnosis of neuritis were demonstrated with T2 weighted images in 4 of 10 patients. No abnormalities and/or nerve enlargement were found on T1 weighted images. An enhancement area was seen after contrast medium injection in only one case. MRI showed a pilocytic astrocytoma in one patient and selective atrophy of the right optic nerve in another. MRI showed normal findings in 4 patients. T1 and T2 weighted fat-suppressed SPIR imaging of the optic nerve improves anatomical definition, lesion detection and characterization in optic nerve conditions

    Cerebral transverse sinus morphology as detected by MR venography in patients with chronic migraine.

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    To clarify the frequency and characteristics of altered transverse sinus morphology in a series of consecutive patients with chronic migraine. As terminology, neuroradiological techniques and patient selection differ widely across various studies, reliable, reproducible information is lacking on the frequency of cerebral transverse sinus asymmetry as measured by cerebral magnetic resonance venography in patients with chronic migraine. We assessed the frequency and characteristics of transverse sinus asymmetries and their correlation with the chronic migraine phenotype in a blind, cross-sectional magnetic resonance venographic study in a series of 83 consecutive patients with chronic migraine. After excluding mild (≤ 10%) physiological differences in transverse sinus diameter, we found magnetic resonance venographic evidence of altered transverse sinus morphology in 50.6% of the patients: 16.9% had moderate transverse sinus asymmetry (≤ 50%), 24.1% severe asymmetry (>50%), and 9.6% aplasia. Among the tested risk factors for migraine chronification, analgesic consumption, anxiety, and high systolic blood pressure were more frequent in patients with transverse sinus aplasia than in those without. Advanced magnetic resonance venographic techniques used in strictly selected subjects disclose transverse sinus asymmetries in as many as 50.6% of patients with chronic migraine, even when mild differences in physiological caliber are excluded. The unexpected correlation between transverse sinus aplasia and some risk factors for migraine chronification requires confirmation in larger studies. © 2012 American Headache Society
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