Journal of neuroimaging : official journal of the American Society of Neuroimaging
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Case Reports
Shunt-responsive dementia in sarcoid meningitis: role of magnetic resonance imaging and cisternography.
The authors report a patient with progressive cognitive and gait decline in association with sarcoid meningitis. The patient had evidence of active inflammation as determined by cerebrospinal fluid examination and was steroid dependent. Magnetic resonance imaging and radionucleotide cisternography were complementary in establishing the diagnosis of communicating hydrocephalus, and suggested that the patient would be shunt responsive.
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Case Reports
Orbital involvement as the initial manifestation of sarcoidosis: magnetic resonance imaging findings.
A 74-year-old man had diplopia, painful right ophthalmoplegia, proptosis, conjunctival injection, and facial skin lesions. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) revealed infiltration of the right intraorbital adipose tissue. ⋯ Treatment with corticosteroids and chlorambucil led to a full clinical recovery. Sarcoidosis should be considered in the evaluation of orbital pseudotumor in elderly patients, even if no systemic manifestations of sarcoidosis are present.
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Isolated infarcts in the periaqueductal region are rare but have been reported after cardiac catheterization. The authors report a case of dorsal midbrain infarct which caused bilateral ptosis, partial upgaze paresis, and internuclear ophthalmoplegia imaged within eight hours with diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI). The lesion was later confirmed on T2-weighted images. Diffusion-weighted imaging can rapidly confirm the diagnosis of this rare brain-stem infarct.
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Based on the authors' experience with reconstruction of the heart using three-dimensional echocardiography, the authors assessed the feasibility of three-dimensional reconstruction of brain images using transfontanelle ultrasound in selected cases of infants with abnormal intracranial findings. A conventional 5-MHz ultrasound transducer inside a transducer holder was rotated 180 degrees around its vertical axis using a computer-controlled stepper motor to acquire multiple sequential cross-sections of the brain. The raw digital data of this three-dimensionally recorded dataset were transferred to a PC-based workstation for further analysis. ⋯ In other 2-week-old newborns, the extension and volume of a periventricular hemorrhage was visualized by three-dimensional reconstruction of coronal cross-sectional images from the acquired three-dimensional dataset. The three-dimensional reconstruction of the lateral ventricles allowed the three-dimensional visualization and estimation of ventricular dilatation in milliliters in an 8-week-old infant with hydrocephalus. Three-dimensional reconstruction of brain images and volume estimation of brain lesions and cavities by ultrasound may provide new insights into the morphology and extension of ultrasonographically visible brain lesions.
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The authors compared two new rapid MRI techniques: double-shot echo-planar imaging (DS-EPI) versus double-shot fast spin-echo (DS-FSE) in the evaluation of cerebral lesions. The authors examined 35 patients with 37 lesions, which were hyperintense on long TR images. Patients were scanned with both DS-EPI and DS-FSE with a time of repetition (TR) of 10,000 milliseconds and an echo time (TE) of 80 milliseconds. ⋯ Whereas DS-FSE and DS-EPI are comparable in their ability to depict hyperintense cerebral pathology, DS-EPI is more time-efficient, and therefore appears preferable. Because of the high magnetic susceptibility of DS-EPI, geometric distortion degrades visualization of lesions in the posterior fossa or near the sinuses. On the other hand, the high magnetic susceptibility results in high conspicuity of blood products.