Journal of neuroimaging : official journal of the American Society of Neuroimaging
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Comparative Study
Transcranial Doppler in 178 patients before, during, and after carotid endarterectomy.
From July 1991 to March 1995, 178 patients who underwent 198 carotid surgical repairs were investigated preoperatively, intraoperatively, and postoperatively by transcranial Doppler sonography (TCD). Preoperative TCD evaluation showed stenosis of the middle cerebral artery (MCA) in 4 patients (2.2%), siphon stenosis in 3 (1.6%), incomplete circle of Willis in 23 (12.9%), a decrease of mean blood flow velocity more than 70% of the basal value during digital common carotid compression in 31 (17.9%), and a critical reduction of vasomotor reactivity (no significant increase of mean blood flow velocity in the MCA during breath-holding test) in 34 (19.1%). Nine patients (5%) had surgery without preoperative angiography. ⋯ Intraoperative TCD monitoring showed a decrease of mean blood flow velocity in the MCA due to shunt malfunction in (8.3%) of 36 surgeries, turbulence of blood flow during declamping in 79 procedures (39.8%), and microembolic events in 10 patients (5%) that were related to one transient and one permanent neurological deficit. Another permanent deficit occurred in a patient without TCD signs. After surgery, TCD reliably detected an early asymptomatic occlusion of the carotid artery, hyperperfusion syndrome in 12 (6.0%), and an increase of vasomotor reactivity in 10 (29.4%) of 34 surgeries.
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High-intensity transient signals on transcranial Doppler sonography (TCD) are associated with atherosclerotic stenosis of the internal carotid artery. Few data exist regarding the detection of high-intensity transient signals in dissected carotid arteries. In the present study, 6 patients with spontaneous carotid dissection, defined by magnetic resonance techniques and duplex sonography, were examined by TCD. ⋯ No microemboli were found contralateral to the dissected arteries. Microemboli can be detected distally from dissected carotid arteries. The present findings support the assumption that embolism is a major cause of stroke in patients with carotid dissection, and suggest that high-intensity transient signals are more common among patients with cerebral ischemia secondary to dissection.
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Neuroimaging studies for 18 patients carrying carbon monoxide toxicity as a discharge diagnosis were reviewed. The most common positive findings were low-density lesions in the globus pallidus (7/18, 39%) and deep white matter changes (5/18, 28%). ⋯ Advanced age, method of exposure (intentional vs accidental), and severity of carboxyhemoglobin level did not predict neuroradiological or clinical outcomes. Early neuroimaging could not be used to predict clinical courses (death or coma vs discharge to either an institution or a home) in the patient population studied.
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American trypanosomiasis (Chagas' disease), a zoonosis caused by Trypanosoma cruzi with a high incidence in Latin America, may induce an uncommon form of localized encephalitis termed "chagoma", found in few immunocompromised patients. The computed tomography (CT) and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) findings of brain chagoma are reported for 3 males (ages 32, 32 and 9 yr), the first 2 infected with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) and the third with acute lymphoblastic leukemia. ⋯ T1-weighted MRI showed hypointense lesions that enhanced with gadolinium-diethylenetriaminepentaacetic acid, corresponding to extensive hyperintense areas on T2-weighted images, producing mass effect. The imaging pattern of brain chagoma presented here is similar to that of cerebral toxoplasmosis and should be considered in the differential diagnosis of an intracerebral mass lesion in immunocompromised patients.