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EEdE-46.

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Presentation on theme: "EEdE-46."— Presentation transcript:

1 eEdE-46

2 NO DISCLOSURE

3 The various presentations of posterior reversible encephalopathy syndrome
M. Ollivier, S. Gerber, D. Galanaud, S. Deltour, D. Ben Salem, D. Dormont, D. Leclercq

4 Posterior Reversible Encephalopathy Syndrome (PRES)
INTRODUCTION Posterior Reversible Encephalopathy Syndrome (PRES) RADIOCLINICAL ENTITY Vasogenic edema Predominate in the posterior white matter Headache Seizures Altered mental status Visual disturbances

5 INTRODUCTION Posterior Reversible Encephalopathy Syndrome (PRES) +
RADIOCLINICAL ENTITY + PREDISPOSING FACTORS Immunosuppressor agents Hypertension Eclampsia Lupus

6 INTRODUCTION The aim of this pictorial review is to:
Define an MRI adapted protocol Describe oedema patterns of distribution Identify the different types of haemorrhage Discuss the relevance of the DWI Approach the physiopathology: perfusion, ARM Monitor changes over time

7 MRI AND PRES MRI is the method of choice Adapted protocol: - FLAIR
- Diffusion - Susceptibility-weighted imaging (SWI > T2* to detect microhemorrhage)* - ASL perfusion - 3D TOF angio-MR - T1-WI pre and post-contrast At the acute phase and follow-up *R.N.K. Nandigam et al. AJNR Am J Neuroradiol. Feb 2009

8 EDEMA DISTRIBUTION TYPICALLY Vasogenic edema Bilateral ± symmetric
Focal or confluent Parieto-occipital regions 98%* Additional involvement: Frontal lobes (68%) typically linear along the superior frontal sulcus Inferior temporal lobes (40%) Cerebellar hemispheres (30-53%) Variable involvement: Cortex Deep and sub-cortical white matter *W.S. Bartynski et al. AJNR Am J Neuroradiol. Aug 2007

9 EDEMA DISTRIBUTION 3 major patterns of PRES (according to Bartynski*)
SUPERIOR FRONTAL SULCAL HOLOHEMISPHERIC WATERSHED DOMINANT PARIETAL-OCCIPITAL *W.S. Bartynski et al. AJNR Am J Neuroradiol. Aug 2007

10 EDEMA DISTRIBUTION 3 major patterns of PRES SUPERIOR FRONTAL SULCAL
Superior frontal sulcal involvement No frontal pole extension Varying degrees of parietal and occipital abnormality

11 EDEMA DISTRIBUTION 3 major patterns of PRES SUPERIOR FRONTAL SULCAL

12 EDEMA DISTRIBUTION 3 major patterns of PRES HOLOHEMISPHERIC WATERSHED
Linear pattern spanning the frontal, parietal and occipital lobes ± temporal lobes - Watershed

13 EDEMA DISTRIBUTION 3 major patterns of PRES HOLOHEMISPHERIC WATERSHED

14 EDEMA DISTRIBUTION 3 major patterns of PRES
DOMINANT PARIETAL-OCCIPITAL The typical “posterior” pattern Parietal and occipital involvement

15 EDEMA DISTRIBUTION 3 major patterns of PRES
DOMINANT PARIETAL-OCCIPITAL

16 EDEMA DISTRIBUTION Cerebellar hemispheres involvement (30-53%)*
Extensive involvement of the cerebellum with obstructive hydrocephalus and tonsillar herniation Associated with the supra tentoriel lesions Isolated cerebellar involvement : 1 case reported** *W.S. Bartynski et al. AJNR. 2007 J.E. Fugate et al. Mayo Clin Proc. 2009 **MH LIM et al. Intern Med. 2008

17 EDEMA DISTRIBUTION ATYPICAL LOCATIONS Asymmetric

18 EDEMA DISTRIBUTION ATYPICAL LOCATIONS Deep white matter
- corona radiata - corpus callosum - internal capsule

19 EDEMA DISTRIBUTION ATYPICAL LOCATIONS Basal ganglia Thalamus

20 EDEMA DISTRIBUTION ATYPICAL LOCATIONS Brain stem (12,5%)* - midbrain
- pons - medulla *W.S. Bartynski et al. AJNR. 2007

21 HAEMORRHAGE IN PRES ≈ 15% * 3 types: Hematoma Sulcal subarachnoid
Minute haemorrhage (<5mm) ± combined *H.M. Hefzy et al. AJNR Am J Neuroradiol. Aug 2009 AM McKinney et al. AJR Am J Roentgenol 2007

22 HAEMORRHAGE IN PRES ETIOLOGIC FACTORS May occur secondarily
Controversial and unproven Alteration of the blood-brain barrier Rupture of pial vessels Post-ischemic reperfusion injury May occur secondarily

23 HAEMORRHAGE IN PRES 20 D

24 HAEMORRHAGE IN PRES ETIOLOGIC FACTORS
Controversial and unproven Alteration of the blood-brain barrier Rupture of pial vessels Post- ischemic reperfusion injury Rate of haemorrhage much greater in patients after allo-BMT (compared with those with solid-organ transplantation)* Blood pressure does not appear to affect the incidence or the type of haemorrhage in PRES* *H.M. Hefzy et al. AJNR Am J Neuroradiol. Aug 2009

25 DIFFUSION IN PRES TYPICAL VASOGENIC EDEMA
Hyperintense, hypointense, or isointense on DIFFUSION-WEIGHTED IMAGING* Increased ADC values *C. Lamy et al. J Neuroimaging. 2004

26 DIFFUSION IN PRES CYTOTOXIC EDEMA POSSIBLE (11-26 %*)
Decreased ADC values May lead to local INFARCTION★ Must be regarded WITH CAUTION: COMPLETE REVERSIBILITY possible** **O. Kastrup et al. Clin Neuroradiol. 2014 A. Benziada-Boudour et al. Journal of Neuroradiology. 2009 *★Covarrubias DJ et al. AJNR Am J Neuroradiol 2002 * Koch S et al. AJNR Am J Neuroradiol 2001

27 DIFFUSION IN PRES No infarction D 0 D 10 D 90

28 sous cortical infraction
DIFFUSION IN PRES Cortico- sous cortical infraction CORTICAL HYPERSIGNAL ADC D 90

29 PERFUSION IN PRES PATHOPHYSIOLOGICAL approach
Disordered cerebral autoregulation and endothelial damage Two main hypotheses: Severe arterial hypertension  failed autoregulation  hyperperfusion  edema W.S. Bartynski. AJNR Am J Neuroradiol, Jun-Jul 2008

30 PERFUSION IN PRES Cerebral blood flow (ASL) HYPERPERFUSION

31 PERFUSION IN PRES D 0 D 10 D 40 FLAIR CBF (ASL)

32 PERFUSION IN PRES PATHOPHYSIOLOGICAL approach
Failed cerebral autoregulation and endothelial damage Two main hypotheses: Vasoconstriction  hypoperfusion  ischemia  edema W.S. Bartynski. AJNR Am J Neuroradiol, Jun-Jul 2008

33 PERFUSION IN PRES Cerebral Blood Volume HYPOPERFUSION

34 PERFUSION IN PRES Cerebral artery VASOCONSTRICTION
In the second and third-order branches Diffuse and focal vasoconstriction Focal vasodilatation Reversible W.S. Bartynski et al. AJNR Am J Neuroradiol. Mar 2008

35 PERFUSION IN PRES

36 PERFUSION IN PRES Vasocontriction / vasodilatation Courtesy
Dr F.Clarençon

37 ENHANCEMENT IN PRES 23 % cases*
Breakdown of the blood-brain barrier ** Endothelial injury or dysfunction LEPTOMENINGEAL enhancement same location as edema or distant from the site of parenchymal involvement★ *O. Kastrup et al. Clin Neuroradiol. 2014 **JG Smirniotopoulos et al. Radiogaphics, 2007 ★R.T. Fitzgerald et al. Pediatric Neurology.2013

38 ENHANCEMENT IN PRES LEPTOMENINGEAL ENHANCEMENT D O D 8
EVOLUTIVE LEPTOMENINGEAL ENHANCEMENT

39 ENHANCEMENT IN PRES INTRAPARENCHYMAL enhancement CORO
Leptomeningeal and intraparenchymal enhancement

40 PRES FOLLOW-UP Typically reversible > 2/3 cases* How quickly?
Complete resolution possible in 1 or 2 weeks Sometimes in up to 1 month *O. Kastrup et al. Clin Neuroradiol. 2014

41 PRES FOLLOW-UP D 0 D 15 D 25 Non uniform evolution : - development of new oedematous lesions - then complete resolution

42 PRES FOLLOW-UP D 0 D 8 D 30 D 90 Slow and retarded regression of edema

43 RECURRENT PRES Anecdotally reported Recurrent PRES: 3,8% * 02/2015
07/2014 Anecdotally reported Recurrent PRES: 3,8% * *J M. Sweany et al. J Comput Assist Tomogr., 2007

44 CONCLUSION The spectrum of imaging findings in PRES is wide
Bilateral parietal and occipital subcortical vasogenic oedema is almost constant (98%) Typically edema is reversible Haemorrhage is common (15%) and does not exclude the diagnosis Lesion with decreased ADC values ≠ conversion to infarction Perfusion and Angio-MR reflect cerebral vasculopathy


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