31 research outputs found

    Neurocysticercosis with a single brain lesion in Germany: a case report

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    Neurocysticercosis is rare in Western Europe and a high degree of physician awareness is necessary for diagnosis. We describe a case of Neurocysticercosis with a single brain lesion acquired in Germany in which only surgical removal and subsequent histological examination allowed diagnosis whereas diagnostic investigation yielded no pathological findings

    Topodiagnostic implications of hemiataxia: An MRI-based brainstem mapping analysis

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    The topodiagnostic implications of hemiataxia following lesions of the human brainstem are only incompletely understood. We performed a voxel-based statistical analysis of lesions documented on standardised MRI in 49 prospectively recruited patients with acute hemiataxia due to isolated unilateral brainstem infarction. For statistical analysis individual MRI lesions were normalised and imported in a three-dimensional voxel-based anatomical model of the human brainstem. Statistical analysis revealed hemiataxia to be associated with lesions of three distinct brainstem areas. The strongest correlation referred to ipsilateral rostral and dorsolateral medullary infarcts affecting the inferior cerebellar peduncle, and the dorsal and ventral spinocerebellar tracts. Secondly, lesions of the ventral pontine base resulted in contralateral limb ataxia, especially when ataxia was accompanied by motor hemiparesis. In patients with bilateral hemiataxia, lesions were located in a paramedian region between the upper pons and lower midbrain, involving the decussation of dentato-rubro-thalamic tracts. We conclude that ataxia following brainstem infarction may reflect three different pathophysiological mechanisms. (1) Ipsilateral hemiataxia following dorsolateral medullary infarctions results from a lesion of the dorsal spinocerebellar tract and the inferior cerebellar peduncle conveying afferent information from the ipsilateral arm and leg. (2) Pontine lesions cause contralateral and not bilateral ataxia presumably due to major damage to the descending corticopontine projections and pontine base nuclei, while already crossed pontocerebellar fibres are not completely interrupted. (3) Finally, bilateral ataxia probably reflects a lesion of cerebellar outflow on a central, rostral pontomesencephalic level. © 2007 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved

    Development of the Arterial Supply of the Spinal Cord Tissue Based on Radioanatomical and Histological Studies in Cattle

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    Purpose!#!Angiographic techniques have gained increasing importance in suspected vascular disease of the spinal cord. This demands an advanced understanding of spinal cord blood vessel anatomy and its embryologically founded broad spectrum of variations. The aim of this study was to improve knowledge on contentious issues concerning the development of spinal cord arterial supply in higher mammals and to offer visual information of high didactic value.!##!Methods!#!The prenatal development was examined in cattle, using multiplanar high-resolution microangiography of injected specimens and microscopic sections. The gestational ages of the 15 specimens were between the late embryonic and the early fetal period (5-11 weeks). Microangiography of the human spinal cord from an earlier published study were used to envisage an adult arterial vascularization pattern in higher mammals.!##!Results!#!Establishment of the unpaired anterior spinal artery (ASA) goes through two procedures of reconfiguration until achieving its final design. Regression of the primarily established anteromedian tract is observed in cattle fetuses of 9-10 weeks. Return to the ontogenetic disposition of bilateral symmetry and a burst of vascularization from all parts of the spinal meninges follow and include the anterior median fissure as a preferred vascular pathway. Large sulcal/central arteries longitudinally anastomosing between each other emerge on both sides of the midline. The embryological pattern of exclusive peripheral medullary supply must have been converted into a combined system of predominant central (centrifugal) supply of the enlargements before a final unpaired ASA can be reconstructed.!##!Conclusion!#!Previous investigators focused on the early embryonic development of spinal cord arteries and missed the profound remodeling of the vascular architecture in the early fetal period

    Diffusion Tensor Imaging des zerebralen Marklagers

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    Diffusion-Tensor MR Imaging at 1.5 and 3.0 T: Initial Observations

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    Lesion Pattern of Brain Stem Infarctions

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    Medullary infarcts may cause ipsilateral masseter reflex abnormalities

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    There is a suprasegmental influence on the masseter reflex (MassR) in animals, which is mediated via the fifth nerve spinal nucleus (5SpN). Corresponding data in humans are lacking. Out of 268 prospectively recruited patients with clinical signs of acute brainstem infarctions, we identified 38 with magnetic resonance imaging (MRI)-documented unilateral infarcts caudal to the levels of the fifth nerve motor and main sensory nuclei. All had biplanar T2- and echo planar diffusion-weighted MRI and MassR testing. Five patients (13%) had ipsilateral lMassR abnormalities. In all, the infarcts involved the region of the 5SpN. Patients with medullary infarcts involving the region of the 5SpN may thus have ipsilateral MassR abnormalities. This possibly represents an interruption of an excitatory projection mediated via the 5SpN to masseter motoneurons in the fifth nerve motor nucleus. MassR abnormalities with medullary lesions restrict the topodiagnostic value of the MassR
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