Neuroimaging clinics of North America
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Neuroimaging Clin. N. Am. · Nov 2010
ReviewSpine and spinal cord emergencies: vascular and infectious causes.
This content presents infectious and vascular spinal emergencies, including epidural abscess, nontraumatic epidural hematoma, vascular malformations, and spinal cord infarction. The spine is subjected to multiple potential insults, such as trauma, infection, ischemia, hemorrhage, tumor, inflammation, and degeneration. ⋯ Therefore, prompt recognition of these entities is important to reverse or minimize potential neurologic injury. The authors discuss several infectious and vascular spinal emergencies, including epidural abscess, nontraumatic epidural hematoma, vascular malformations, and spinal cord infarction.
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Worldwide, an estimated 10 million people are affected annually by traumatic brain injury (TBI). More than 5 million Americans currently live with long-term disability as a result of TBI and more than 1.5 million individuals sustain a new TBI each year. It has been predicted that TBI will become the third leading cause of death and disability in the world by the year 2020. This article outlines the classification of TBI, details the types of lesions encountered, and discusses the various imaging modalities available for the evaluation of TBI.
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Nontraumatic (or spontaneous) intracranial hemorrhage most commonly involves the brain parenchyma and subarachnoid space. This entity accounts for at least 10% of strokes and is a leading cause of death and disability in adults. Important causes of spontaneous intracranial hemorrhage include hypertension, cerebral amyloid angiopathy, aneurysms, vascular malformations, and hemorrhagic infarcts (both venous and arterial). Imaging findings in common and less common causes of spontaneous intracranial hemorrhage are reviewed.
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In this article the individual components of multimodal computed tomography and multimodal magnetic resonance imaging are discussed, the current status of neuroimaging for the evaluation of the acute ischemic stroke is presented, and the potential role of a combined multimodal stroke protocol is addressed.
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Neuroimaging Clin. N. Am. · Aug 2010
ReviewRadiation oncology in brain tumors: current approaches and clinical trials in progress.
Radiation therapy remains a critical therapeutic modality in the treatment of adult brain tumors. However, its use continues to evolve depending on the histologic findings of the brain tumor. In high-grade gliomas, current trials focus on the addition of systemic agents and optimization of target delineation to improve the therapeutic ratio of radiotherapy. ⋯ With primary central nervous system lymphoma, the advent of high-dose methotrexate-based chemotherapy and the risk of severe early neurocognitive toxicity have brought the role of radiotherapy into question. With meningioma, the use of normal tissue-sparing techniques such as radiosurgery has allowed for the successful treatment of patients who are eminently curable and with a life expectancy that is generally no different than that of the general population. Particular attention in this review is paid to current approaches, contemporary trials, and modern therapeutic dilemmas.