The neuroradiology journal
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Objective The objective of this study was to evaluate the haemorrhage risk of known and unknown cerebral arteriovenous malformations and their obstetric management. Methods A retrospective review was performed and analysed 67 consecutive cases of arteriovenous malformation with pregnancy history. Results Sixty-seven cases of arteriovenous malformation with pregnancy histories were identified. ⋯ Known arteriovenous malformation gravida was prone to caesarean section; however, vaginal delivery did not increase the haemorrhage risk in unknown arteriovenous malformation gravidas (1.8% vs. 0%, P = 1.000). Conclusion Prior treatment for ruptured arteriovenous malformation could prevent its haemorrhage during pregnancy and the haemorrhage risk of unruptured arteriovenous malformation in pregnancies is low. Although known arteriovenous malformation gravida is prone to caesarean section, vaginal delivery seems not to increase the haemorrhage risk in unknown arteriovenous malformation gravidas.
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Back pain and scoliosis in children most commonly present as benign and self-limited entities. However, persistent back pain and/or progressive scoliosis should always be taken seriously in children. ⋯ A correct imaging approach is important to define a clear diagnosis and should be reserved for children with persistent symptoms or concerning clinical and laboratory findings. This article reviews the role of different imaging techniques in the diagnostic approach to back pain and scoliosis, and offers a comprehensive review of the main imaging findings associated with common and uncommon causes of back pain and scoliosis in the pediatric population.
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Introduction Previous studies have shown that the arcuate fasciculus has a leftward asymmetry in right-handers that could be correlated with the language lateralisation defined by functional magnetic resonance imaging. Nonetheless, information about the asymmetry of the other fibres that constitute the dorsal language pathway is scarce. Objectives This study investigated the asymmetry of the white-matter tracts involved in the dorsal language pathway through the diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) technique, in relation to language hemispheric dominance determined by task-dependent functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI). ⋯ The other tracts presented predominance for rightward lateralisation, especially superior longitudinal fasciculus (SLF) II/III (nine subjects), but their LI did not correlate (directly or inversely) with fMRI LI. Conclusion The fibres that constitute the dorsal language pathway have an asymmetric distribution in the cerebral hemispheres. Only the asymmetry of the arcuate fasciculus is correlated with fMRI language lateralisation.