The neuroradiology journal
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Purpose The objectives of this study were to determine if HIV-infected patients treated with highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART), without dementia, suffer from longitudinal gray matter (GM) volume loss, changes in white matter (WM) integrity and deterioration in functional connectivity at rest, in an average interval of 30 months. Methods Clinically stable HIV-positive patients (on HAART, CD4 + T lymphocyte > 200 cells/μl, and viral loads <50 copies/μl) were recruited. None of them had HIV-associated dementia. ⋯ Five resting-state networks were identified in our patients. In the second MRI, HIV-positive patients presented increased areas of functional connectivity in visual pathways, frontoparietal and cerebellar networks, compared with the first MRI (considering p < 0.05). Conclusions RS-fMRI revealed potentially compensatory longitudinal alterations in the brains of HIV-positive patients, attempting to compensate for brain damage related to the infection.
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Introduction Existing stroke literature demonstrates that rapid recanalization of vessels improves long-term prognosis after acute ischemic stroke. However, further optimization of the speed of the thrombectomy procedure, used to recanalize a blocked vessel, is limited by our minimal knowledge of the clot dimensions pre-procedure. Knowing the clot dimensions would allow planning of the thrombectomy procedure with the appropriate size and length of stent retriever, and determination of the correct site of the stent deployment ensuring total coverage of the clot by the stent retriever. ⋯ Results Clot length was not significantly different on 3D mCTA versus mCTA MIPs, nor was it significantly different on MIP mCTA versus DSA. Pathological evidence also supported our ability to measure clot length on mCTA. Conclusions We suggest that mCTA is a reliable and valid measure of clot length in acute ischemic stroke patients.