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MRI Changes (mri + change)
Selected AbstractsMRI Changes in Thrombotic Microangiopathy Secondary to Malignant HypertensionJOURNAL OF NEUROIMAGING, Issue 2 2007Mandeep Garewal MD ABSTRACT Thrombotic microangiopathy with thrombocytopenia and intravascular hemolysis are characteristic of three disorders: malignant hypertension (MH), disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC), and thrombocytopenic thrombotic purpura (TTP). We describe a patient with thrombotic microangiopathy secondary to malignant hypertension that caused extensive bilateral cortical ischemic infarction. [source] MRI changes in encephalitis in type 1 diabetes mellitus,PRACTICAL DIABETES INTERNATIONAL (INCORPORATING CARDIABETES), Issue 9 2002No. 22 in a regular educational series of brief illustrated descriptions of interesting or unusual diabetes related cases, conditions No abstract is available for this article. [source] White matter changes in normal pressure hydrocephalus and Binswanger disease: specificity, predictive value and correlations to axonal degeneration and demyelinationACTA NEUROLOGICA SCANDINAVICA, Issue 6 2002M. Tullberg Objectives, To analyse the diagnostic and prognostic value of periventricular hyperintensity (PVH) and deep white matter hyperintensity (DWMH) magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) changes and their relation to symptoms and cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) markers of demyelination (sulphatide) and axonal degeneration [neurofilament triplet protein (NFL)] in a large series of patients with normal pressure hydrocephalus (NPH) and Binswanger disease (BD). Materials and methods, PVH and DWMH were determined by a semi-automatic segmentation method on T2-weighted images in 29 patients with NPH and 17 patients with BD. CSF analyses, psychometric testing and quantification of balance, gait and continence were performed in all patients and also postoperatively in NPH patients. Results, No MRI variable could identify NPH or BD patients. Abundant PVH and DWMH preoperatively correlated with improvement in gait, balance and psychometric performance after shunt surgery (P < 0.05). CSF sulphatide correlated positively with the amount of DWMH (P < 0.05) while NFL was correlated to both PVH and DWMH (P < 0.05). Abundant PVH correlated with poor psychometric performance while DWMH correlated with gait disturbance (P < 0.05). Postoperative reduction in PVH correlated with improvement in gait, balance and psychometric performance. Conclusion, In spite of a refined quantification method, NPH and BD patients exhibited similar MRI changes. MRI had a predictive value in NPH patients. DWMH might relate to demyelination and PVH to neuronal axonal dysfunction. NPH and BD share the major part of symptoms and MRI changes, indicating a common pathophysiological pattern, and we raise the question of how to treat BD patients. [source] Correlation of neurological manifestations and MR images in a patient with Wilson's disease after liver transplantationACTA NEUROLOGICA SCANDINAVICA, Issue 2 2000J-C. Wu Orthotopic liver transplantation (OLT) has been applied to patients with Wilson's disease (WD) for correction of irreversible liver cirrhosis. However, the neurological outcome and the correlation between clinical manifestations and neuroimage findings after OLT remain uncertain. We present a WD patient who showed an improvement in both liver functions and neurological manifestations after OLT. Serum levels of ceruloplasmin and copper returned to normal rapidly after the operation. His ataxic gait was improved 5 months later and dysmetria and tremor disappeared 11 months later. The high signal intensities on T2-weighted brain magnetic resonance images regressed at bilateral thalami 5 months later and disappeared in bilateral thalami and red nuclei 16 months after OLT. We conclude that the neurological improvement could be expected in WD patients after OLT. The improvement was correlated with the MRI changes in red nuclei and bilateral thalami. [source] |