Nō to shinkei = Brain and nerve
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Diffusion is a measure of motion freedom and is a sensitive parameter to characterize the tissue at the microscopic level. The methods of measuring in vivo diffusion by magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) have been based mainly on the addition of two motion-probing gradients (MPG) to the spin echo sequence to produce signal attenuation for the spins moving at random. The resultant MR images reflect the intravoxel incoherent motions (IVIM), which contain both water molecule diffusion and perfusion in the capillary network, and can be quantified by an apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC). ⋯ The eddy current may also result from the strong gradients, producing shiftlike artifact. Such artifacts can be compensated for by appropriate shaping of the current pulses sent into the gradient coils, or by use of shielded gradients. As with rapid progresses in perfusion imaging of ischemia penumbra, misery perfusion and luxury perfusion, new insight into the diffusion weighted MRI will be significant.
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We report a 64-year-old Japanese woman who died one year after the onset of progressive gait disturbance and dementia. She noted a difficulty in holding a glass and hand tremor in June of 1996 when she was 63 years old. In July of 1996, she tended to lean toward left when she walked. ⋯ As autopsy permission was obtained only for the brain, it was not clear whether or not this patient had an occult malignancy somewhere in her body, however, there was no evidence to indicate paraneoplastic degeneration of the central nervous system. As the patient did not have meningeal signs until one month before her death, it is difficult to ascribe her entire neurologic problems to her meningitis. Finally, her visual hallucination was vivid and colorful; we thought this might have been