Neuroradiology
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Clinical and radiological changes in tuberculous meningitis (TBM) have been reported but there is paucity of comprehensive serial clinicoradiological follow-up. In this prospective hospital based study, we investigated serial changes in the clinical and radiological findings and their relationships over 6 months in 31 consecutive patients with TBM, diagnosed on the basis of clinical, radiological and spinal fluid criteria. We graded the severity of the TBM as I-III. ⋯ Thus, a third of patients with TBM may deteriorate within 6 weeks of starting treatment and CT can be helpful in managing them. Worsening on treatment was related to weakness and GCS on admission. In most patients CT remained abnormal at 6 months despite clinical recovery.
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Magnetic resonance imaging is increasingly used in stroke trials for early diagnosis and follow-up of lesion size. Since volumetric measurement remains a laborious and time-consuming task, a rapid and reliable method for the assessment of lesion size has been developed and validated in diffusion weighted imaging (DWI) and fluid attenuated inversion recovery (FLAIR) sequences. These were serially obtained in 40 patients less than 8 h after the onset of symptoms of a middle cerebral artery territory stroke (day 1), as well as on days 3 and 18. ⋯ Lesion volumes as determined by both methods were highly correlated (DWI: r = 0.966, FLAIR: r = 0.979, p < 0.001). To conclude, the APM is simple, rapid and reliable for the estimation of lesion size in acute ischemic stroke. It can be recommended for broader application in clinical trials.
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Surgery is currently the standard treatment for spinal dural arteriovenous fistulae (DAVF). Endovascular embolisation of these lesions using N-butyl cyanoacrylate (NBCA) has a high success rate. ⋯ It is delivered with greater control than NBCA without the necessity for rapid withdrawal of the catheter and may therefore overcome some of the drawbacks of NBCA. We report two patients who underwent Onyx embolisation of spinal DAVF; to our knowledge this is the first such report.
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MR assessment of pediatric brain tumors has expanded to include physiologic information related to cellular metabolites, hemodynamic and diffusion parameters. The purpose of this study was to investigate the relationship between MR and proton MR spectroscopic imaging in children with primary brain tumors. Twenty-one patients (mean age 9 years) with histologically verified brain tumors underwent conventional MR imaging, hemodynamic MR imaging (HMRI) and proton MR spectroscopic imaging (MRSI). ⋯ The relationships between Cho, rCBV, ADC and lipids signify that tumor physiology is influenced by the tumor's physical and chemical environment. Normalized Cho and lipids distinguished high-grade from low-grade tumors ( P<0.05). Multiparametric MR imaging using MRSI, HMRI and DWMRI enhances assessment of brain tumors in children and improves our understanding of tumor physiology while promising to distinguish higher- from lower-malignancy tumors, a distinction that is particularly clinically important among inoperable tumors.
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Case Reports
Giant cervical internal carotid artery pseudoaneurysm in a child: endovascular treatment.
We report a child with a giant upper cervical internal carotid artery pseudoaneurysm presenting with dysphagia, respiratory distress and a sentinel mild epistaxis, then massive epistaxis. Rupture of the pseudoaneurysm during treatment occurred, as in one reported case. Prompt endovascular treatment yielded a good outcome.