• Neurosurg Focus · Dec 2019

    Review

    Magnetic resonance vessel wall imaging in cerebrovascular diseases

    • Christopher C Young, Robert H Bonow, Guilherme Barros, Mahmud Mossa-Basha, Louis J Kim, and Michael R Levitt.
    • Departments of1Neurological Surgery.
    • Neurosurg Focus. 2019 Dec 13; 47 (6): E4.

    AbstractCerebrovascular diseases manifest as abnormalities of and disruption to the intracranial vasculature and its capacity to carry blood to the brain. However, the pathogenesis of many cerebrovascular diseases begins in the vessel wall. Traditional luminal and perfusion imaging techniques do not provide adequate information regarding the differentiation, onset, or progression of disease. Intracranial high-resolution MR vessel wall imaging (VWI) has emerged as an invaluable technique for understanding and evaluating cerebrovascular diseases. The location and pattern of contrast enhancement in intracranial VWI provides new insight into the inflammatory etiology of cerebrovascular diseases and has potential to permit earlier diagnosis and treatment. In this report, technical considerations of VWI are discussed and current applications of VWI in vascular malformations, blunt cerebrovascular injury/dissection, and steno-occlusive cerebrovascular vasculopathies are reviewed.

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