Articles: brain-pathology.
-
Cranial magnetic resonance images (MRI) of the cerebral areas of 40 patients with multiple system atrophy (MSA) and of 61 age-matched controls were analyzed. The cerebral area of MSA patients was 131. 95+/-15.89 cm(2) (mean+/-S. D.), which was significantly smaller than that of normal controls at 149.01+/-10.93 cm(2) (P<0.0001). ⋯ There were no significant differences within the MSA subtypes or between gender. The progression of cerebral atrophy in MSA correlated more with duration (r=-0.634) than age (r=-0.421). We conclude that MRI findings throughout the course of MSA suggest progressive cerebral atrophy, which is common in all subtypes and reflects duration of the disease rather than age.
-
Journal of neurotrauma · Feb 2000
Comparative StudyTemporal profile of release of neurobiochemical markers of brain damage after traumatic brain injury is associated with intracranial pathology as demonstrated in cranial computerized tomography.
This study aimed at the investigation of release patterns of neuron specific enolase (NSE) and protein S-100B after traumatic brain injury (TBI) and their association with intracranial pathologic changes as demonstrated in computerized tomography (CT). We analyzed NSE and S-100B concentrations in serial venous blood samples taken one to three days after TBI in 66 patients by the use of immunoluminometric assays. These markers are considered to be specific neurobiochemical indicators of damage to glial (S-100B) or neuronal (NSE) brain tissue. ⋯ Release patterns of S-100B and NSE differed in patients with primary cortical contusions, diffuse axonal injury (DAI), and signs of cerebral edema (ICP) without focal mass lesions. All serum concentrations of NSE and S-100B were significantly correlated with the volume of contusions. The data of the present study indicate that the early release patterns of NSE and S-100 may mirror different pathophysiological consequences of traumatic brain injury.
-
Periventricular white matter hyperintensities on postmortem magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and myelin-stained frontal and parietal histologic sections were evaluated independently in 12 cases. There was a strong relationship between the extent of white matter hyperintensities on MRI and the extent of gross and microscopic changes seen in the white matter of myelin-stained sections, particularly in the frontal lobe. In this material, the extent of myelin rarefaction correlated with a 0- to 8-point white matter hyperintensity scale rating on MRI in the same brains.
-
Comput. Aided Surg. · Jan 2000
A data fusion environment for multimodal and multi-informational neuronavigation.
Part of the planning and performance of neurosurgery consists of determining target areas, areas to be avoided, landmark areas, and trajectories, all of which are components of the surgical script. Nowadays, neurosurgeons have access to multimodal medical imaging to support the definition of the surgical script. The purpose of this paper is to present a software environment developed by the authors that allows full multimodal and multi-informational planning as well as neuronavigation for epilepsy and tumor surgery. ⋯ In this short evaluation, the ability to access preoperative multi-functional and anatomical data within the neuronavigation system was a valuable support for the surgical procedure.
-
Malaria is one of the main health problems in the Third World. Plasmodium falciparum infects as many as 300 million people, causing up to three million deaths each year, most of which occur in African children. Cerebral malaria is the most common lethal complication of P. falciparum infection in children and is defined by three criteria: disturbances of consciousness, presence of P. falciparum parasitaemia and absence of other causes of acute encephalopathy. Cerebral malaria is a medical emergency and parenteral quinine is the most recommended treatment because of the frequency of chloroquine-resistant strains. Mortality is as high as 50 per cent and residual disability is present in about 20 per cent of survivors. ⋯ We must know better about cerebral malaria because of an increasing incidence of imported malaria due to emigration from African countries and Spaniard tourism to areas of endemic paludism.