Journal of neuroimaging : official journal of the American Society of Neuroimaging
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Thrombolysis for the treatment of acute ischemic stroke requires careful selection of patients. The authors report a case of aortic dissection presenting with acute ischemic stroke for which emergent ultrasonographic evaluation was helpful in the diagnosis and subsequent treatment. ⋯ Carotid ultrasound revealed right common carotid occlusion that led to the diagnosis of aortic dissection, confirmed by chest computed tomography. An experienced sonographer with skills to perform rapid intra- and extracranial examinations may help to change the treatment plan for acute stroke patients.
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Cerebral malaria occurs in 2% of patients infected by Plasmodium falciparum. Magnetic resonance imaging findings of small white matter infarcts due to cerebral malaria have been previously reported, however nonspecific. Since diffusion-weighted imaging can differentiate acute embolic infarcts from other chronic or nonspecific white matter lesions, it may aid diagnosis of this illness in patients who travel to endemic areas.
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Review Case Reports
Evidence of acute ischemic tissue change in transient global amnesia in magnetic resonance imaging: case report and literature review.
Transient global amnesia is a benign syndrome of sudden-onset alteration of behavior with temporary dysfunction of anterograde and recent retrograde memory. Its neural substrates remain uncertain. ⋯ The authors report a case of a 62-year-old man with a transient attack of memory disturbance, suggestive of transient global amnesia, in which magnetic resonance imaging performed 48 hours after onset showed left mesial temporal lobe signal changes on diffusion-weighted imaging and fluid-attenuated inversion recovery images. The findings and a literature review lend further support to the ischemic pathogenesis of transient global amnesia as a possible etiology, and underscore the role of diffusion-weighted imaging in the diagnosis of this condition.
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Early and accurate diagnosis of cerebral venous thrombosis (CVT) is possible with the help of computed tomography (CT) scan and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). Empty delta sign on postcontrast CT is present in only up to 30% of the cases. The role of CT venography is not yet established, but it is emerging as an effective modality for diagnosis of CVT. ⋯ Diffusion-weighted imaging is a relatively new MRI technique that is extremely sensitive in detecting acute arterial strokes and can distinguish cytotoxic and vasogenic edema. The presence of hyperintense signal on diffusion-weighted imaging in the occluded veins or sinuses at the time of diagnosis may predict a low rate of vessel recanalization. Contrast angiography should be strongly considered if isolated cortical vein thrombosis is suspected.
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Patients with acute ischemic stroke who undergo emergent cerebral angiography for consideration of intra-arterial treatment and do not have an angiographically demonstrable occlusion pose a management dilemma. The authors reviewed their experience to determine the clinical out comes of patients with ischemic stroke evaluated within 6 hours of symptom onset in whom negative angiograms were obtained. ⋯ Although the outcome following ischemic stroke in patients without angiographically documented occlusion appears to be better than that reported for patients with angiographically documented occlusion, death or disability is observed in at least one third of the patients. There fore, acute ischemic stroke in the absence of angiographic occlusion is not entirely a "benign" entity and can be particularly devastating when the brainstem is involved.