42 research outputs found

    Choroid plexus volume in multiple sclerosis can be estimated on structural MRI avoiding contrast injection

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    We compared choroid plexus (ChP) manual segmentation on non-contrast-enhanced (non-CE) sequences and reference standard CE T1- weighted (T1w) sequences in 61 multiple sclerosis patients prospectively included. ChP was separately segmented on T1w, T2-weighted (T2w) fluid-attenuated inversion-recovery (FLAIR), and CE-T1w sequences. Inter-rater variability assessed on 10 subjects showed high reproducibility between sequences measured by intraclass correlation coefficient (T1w 0.93, FLAIR 0.93, CE-T1w 0.99). CE-T1w showed higher signal-to-noise ratio and contrast-to-noise ratio (CE-T1w 23.77 and 18.49, T1w 13.73 and 7.44, FLAIR 13.09 and 10.77, respectively). Manual segmentation of ChP resulted 3.073 ± 0.563 mL (mean ± standard deviation) on T1w, 3.787 ± 0.679 mL on FLAIR, and 2.984 ± 0.506 mL on CE-T1w images, with an error of 28.02 ± 19.02% for FLAIR and 3.52 ± 12.61% for T1w. FLAIR overestimated ChP volume compared to CE-T1w (p < 0.001). The Dice similarity coefficient of CE-T1w versus T1w and FLAIR was 0.67 ± 0.05 and 0.68 ± 0.05, respectively. Spatial error distribution per slice was calculated after nonlinear coregistration to the standard MNI152 space and showed a heterogeneous profile along the ChP especially near the fornix and the hippocampus. Quantitative analyses suggest T1w as a surrogate of CE-T1w to estimate ChP volume.Relevance statement To estimate the ChP volume, CE-T1w can be replaced by non-CE T1w sequences because the error is acceptable, while FLAIR overestimates the ChP volume. This encourages the development of automatic tools for ChP segmentation, also improving the understanding of the role of the ChP volume in multiple sclerosis, promoting longitudinal studies.Key points • CE-T1w sequences are considered the reference standard for ChP manual segmentation.• FLAIR sequences showed a higher CNR than T1w sequences but overestimated the ChP volume.• Non-CE T1w sequences can be a surrogate of CE-T1w sequences for manual segmentation of ChP

    Study of“Shaken Baby Syndrome”: Morphological and Diffusion MRI Data

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    Shaken baby syndrome (SBS) is the most common cause of death related to child abuse; nonfatal consequences of SBS include varying degrees of visual, motor and cognitive impairment due to severe brain damage in almost 30% of infants with SBS. Brain damage occurs from the biomechanical forces, swelling, ischemia and altered vascular autoregulation and from additionally axonal damage[1].In the present study we want to examine a cohort of 7 patient affected by SBS and compare their data with controls choosen by same range of age, 19 months till 60. Using MRI techniques we define a new paradigm for demonstrating, through voxel based morphometry, deficiencies, connected to white and grey matter regions, in the prefrontal cortex and also in the hippocampus, amygdala, corpus callosum and optical radiation. Adding diffusion tensor imaging technique by constrained spherical deconvolution[2] our study put in evidence connectivity between investigated areas, suggesting neural network abnormalities. With this “state of art” studies we can show a correlation between childhood abuse and brain structures modification. Our aim is to make a longitudinal study on the anatomical data of these patients following their clinical evolution

    Case 39: Limbic Encephalitis

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    Cluster headache: When to worry? Two case reports

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    The clinical criteria for cluster headache (CH) are included in Chapter 3 of the International Classification of Headache Disorders, 3rd beta edition (ICHD-III). CH may sometimes be secondary to other pathologies

    18F-FDG-PET and MRI in autoimmune encephalitis: a systematic review of brain findings

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    In the diagnostic assessment of autoimmune encephalitis (AE) associated with antineural antibody (Ab) imaging with 18F-fluorodeoxyglucose (FDG), positron emission tomography (PET) was initially only used to screen for occult malignancies in paraneoplastic cases. Today accumulating evidence also supports the use of PET imaging for the objective assessment of metabolic changes in the brain of patients with AE. On the other hand, magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) of the brain reveals a variable picture depending on the specific syndrome and associated antibody, and may be normal in a sizable proportion of patients.From a systematic review of the literature, it seems that some specific metabolic patterns correlate with the presence of specific Ab, such as a cerebral posterior hypometabolism in anti-NMDAR encephalitis, and a mesiotemporal hypermetabolism (associated with hyperintensities and swollen structures on MRI T2) in encephalitis with LGI1 and onconeural Ab. To ascertain the prognostic value of FDG-PET and its role in driving therapy, larger (preferably longitudinal) studies are needed on age-matched, untreated patients with the same Ab status, who undergo imaging at a similar time after the onset of their symptoms. This would enable a systematic correlation between MRI and FDG-PET findings, and help to clarify a number of unsolved clinical and technical issues
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