Journal of neuroimaging : official journal of the American Society of Neuroimaging
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Stroke is one of the most feared complications after cardiac catheterization. Endovascular treatment combining mechanical and pharmacological therapy has been reported as an effective treatment option in selected patients with acute stroke due to large-vessel occlusion. Little is known about safety and clinical outcome when this approach is utilized in cardiac catheterization associated strokes. ⋯ In acute strokes following cardiac catheterization, multimodal endovascular therapy is safe and feasible and despite a high mortality is associated with a higher than expected rate of favorable outcomes compared to the natural history of the disease. Despite a significant proportion of patients developing symptoms in hospitals where neurointerventions are available, the median time to treatment was longer than expected. Future efforts should focus on faster implementation of recanalization therapies for this form of acute stroke.
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Recombinant tissue plasminogen activator (rtPA)-associated hyperperfusion syndrome in brainstem after acute stroke has not yet been reported. The current report demonstrates that rtPA-associated hyperperfusion syndrome can be a cause of clinical deterioration following improvement (DFI) after rtPA in acute stroke. ⋯ rtPA-associated hyperperfusion can occur at brainstem causing transient neurological deficits. It can be a cause of DFI in addition to reocclusion after recanalization.
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Effects of methadone misuse have been rarely described. The purpose of this case report is to increase the knowledge of methadone-related leukoencephalopathy. ⋯ Lesion pattern included subtle cerebellar involvement, mainly reversible extensive bilateral and symmetric brain involvement, cystic degeneration in the periventricular regions, sparing of corpus callosum and subcortical U-fibers, development of diffuse brain atrophy, and clear-cut clinical improvement.
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We examined the correlation of angiographic collaterals in acute stroke with the presence, extent, and distribution of white matter changes, so-called Leukoaraiosis, in an effort to determine if Leukoaraiosis indicates chronic cerebral hypoperfusion and/or is associated with the development of cerebral collateral circulation. ⋯ Leukoaraisosis exhibits no overt relationship with the extent of collaterals measured at angiography in acute ischemic stroke. Chronic small-vessel disease may be a distinct pathophysiologic entity unrelated to arteriogenesis and compensatory aspects of collateral flow.
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A 55-year-old man presented with acute onset dysarthria caused by left hypoglossal palsy. He had neither surgery nor injury prior to the onset of his symptoms. We detected no abnormalities with conventional magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) except for a slight gadolinium enhancement of the left hypoglossal nerve. ⋯ A systemic survey found no malignancies. After 8 months, sustained left hypoglossal palsy and no change in the MRI led to the diagnosis of idiopathic hypoglossal nerve laceration with evulsion. In such patients, the cause of the defect is not always apparent and 3-dimensional CISS MRI may resolve this issue.