AJNR. American journal of neuroradiology
-
To study MR patterns of venous sinus occlusive disease and to relate them to the underlying pathophysiology by comparing the appearance and pathophysiologic features of venous sinus occlusive disease with those of arterial ischemic disease. ⋯ MR findings of venous sinus occlusive disease are different from those of arterial ischemia and may reflect different underlying pathophysiology. In venous sinus occlusive disease, the breakdown of the blood-brain barrier (vasogenic edema and abnormal parenchymal enhancement) does not always occur, and brain swelling can persist up to 2 years with or without abnormal signal on T2-weighted images. Abnormal signal on T2-weighted images may be reversible and does not always indicate infarction.
-
AJNR Am J Neuroradiol · Feb 1994
Dyke Award paper. MR of wallerian degeneration in the feline visual system: characterization by magnetization transfer rate with histopathologic correlation.
To examine the utility of measuring magnetization transfer ratio for for delineating the dynamic changes of wallerian degeneration which occur after controlled injury in a feline model in which anatomic pathways are well understood. ⋯ Magnetization transfer ratio seems to be more sensitive for early detection of degeneration than conventional spin-echo imaging. Moreover, temporal changes in magnetization transfer ratio seem to correspond well with known histologic phases of wallerian degeneration.
-
AJNR Am J Neuroradiol · Feb 1994
Case ReportsTransient monocular blindness in carotid occlusion testing.
A patient developed monocular blindness 23 minutes into a temporary balloon occlusion test of the carotid artery, on the side being tested. His vision returned to normal 1 minute after the balloon was deflated. The authors emphasize the importance of complete frequent neurologic examination during this kind of test.