FLAIR and T2.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
CT Scan Reveals a mass that may or may not be enhanced with use of contrast medium. On CT, low-grade gliomas may be isodense with normal brain parenchyma.
Advertisements

Q? Neuroradiology This would be best described as a Spetzler grade: 1
John D. Grimme1, J. Keith Smith1,
Differential Diagnosis of Bright Lesions on Diffusion-weighted MR Images Fahad albadr MD.
Radiation Injury Can Mimic Tumor Progression Following Proton Radiotherapy for Atypical Teratoid Rhabdoid Tumor in Pediatric Patients M Chang 1, F Perez.
MedPix Medical Image Database COW - Case of the Week Case Contributor: Steven J Goldstein Affiliation: University of Kentucky.
Neuroimaging findings in pediatric cerebral sinovenous thrombosis
Imaging Spectrum of Herpes Encephalitis In Paediatric Brain Abstract IDNo: 90.
E.GAMY-J.MAHLAOUI-T.AMIL-S-CHAOUIR-A.HANINE- M.MAHI-S.AKJOUJ Medical imaging military hospital Mohammed V instruction –Rabat. NR3.
Neuroimaging in Neuropsychiatry
The Role of MRI in Perinatal Anoxic Ischaemic Brain Injury
EE-52: Unilateral Posterior Reversible Encephalopathy Syndrome (UPRES) in a Patient with Sickle Cell Disease Yankai Sun, MD, Shalabh Bobra, MD, Hasit Mehta,
Intro to Neuroradiology
Perinatal arterial ischemic stroke related to carotid artery occlusion
Evidence-Base Medicine
RADIOLOGY OF SKELETAL SYSTEM Lecture 1
Important note biochem
CASES 7-11.
Done By: Dr. Faisal Al-Thekair
Neuroradiology interactive lecture
Stroke imaging M3 radiology August 2014.
Neuroradiology interactive lecture
Angela Lignelli, MD, Alexander G. Khandji, MD  Neurosurgery Clinics 
Priorities for Clinical Research in Intracerebral Hemorrhage
Cerebral Venous Sinus (Sinovenous) Thrombosis in Children
Brain Scintigraphy.
Clayton Wiley MD/PhD.
The Role of Neuroimaging in Sport-Related Concussion
How I treat and manage strokes in sickle cell disease
Reversible posterior leukoencephalopathy syndrome and silent cerebral infarcts are associated with severe acute chest syndrome in children with sickle.
Valvular Heart Disease, Cardiomyopathies,
Pseudo-Subarachnoid Hemorrhage: A Potential Imaging Pitfall
A healthy 46-year-old woman presented with an acute onset of psychiatric disturbance and hyponatremia. A healthy 46-year-old woman presented with an acute.
Diffusion Magnetic Resonance Imaging in the Head and Neck
Volume 52, Issue 6, Pages (June 2015)
Anti-N-methyl D-aspartate receptor encephalitis.
MRI Brain Evaluation of brain diseases Stroke
MR Imaging of hypoxic ischemic encephalopathy – Distribution Patterns and ADC value correlations  Lokesh Rana, Dinesh Sood, Raman Chauhan, Roshni Shukla,
Pseudo-Subarachnoid Hemorrhage: A Potential Imaging Pitfall
Sectional Anatomy   Nancy – what’s the title? Don’t use lesson/topic number, because we may move it around someday, just give it a name. Skull Pathology?
Figure 1. Prebiopsy and postbiopsy MRI
Patient 8. Patient 8. A 66-year-old man with late subacute intracerebral hematoma on MR images obtained 30 days after symptom onset.A, T1-weighted image.
A–C, Case 1. A–C, Case 1. Typical white matter changes involving the corpus callosum and the pyramidal tracts (A and C, arrows), dilation of the lateral.
Figure 1 Cerebral MRI during the disease course Cerebral MRI with multiple cerebral supratentorial lesions during the disease course: periventricular lesions.
A 47-year-old man with HSE
BASICS OF DIFFUSION MRI
NEUROIMAGING FINDINGS OF RARE NEURODEGENERATIVE DISEASES RELATED TO DEMENTIA SYMPTOMS INTRODUCTION: Neurodegenerative diseases are diversified group of.
Typical MRI features of Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (CJD).
Review of diffuse cortical injury on diffusion-weighted imaging in acutely encephalopathic patients with an acronym: “CRUMPLED”  Yasemin Koksel, John.
Benign vs malignant collapse
MR scan of brain in four patients presenting as mimics of prion disease. MR scan of brain in four patients presenting as mimics of prion disease. (A) C9orf72.
A–C, DWI san (A) at the level of the atria of the lateral ventricles reveals areas of acute (hyperintense) infarction in the frontoparietal region and.
A, A 50-year old female patient with acute ischemic stroke (AIS), visible as an area of reduced diffusion (dark region) on the apparent diffusion coefficient.
Case 7: 24-year-old man with acute IVH and intraparenchymal hemorrhage who had MR imaging and CT 12 hours apart, each approximately 72 hours after ictus.
A 12-month-old girl with chronic infarction in bilateral middle cerebral artery territories. A 12-month-old girl with chronic infarction in bilateral middle.
Hashimoto encephalitis.
Involvement of the frontal and parietal lobes in patients with isolated cortical hyperintensities. Involvement of the frontal and parietal lobes in patients.
73-year-old man with left hemiparesis.
Anti-voltage-gated calcium channel encephalitis.
Patient 1. Patient 1. A 54-year-old comatose man experienced an episode of apnea and hypoxia during surgery, with subsequent cardiopulmonary arrest and.
63-year-old woman with right hemiparesis and aphasia.
Typical disease course of cPML in an HIV-positive patient receiving HAART. Top panel, a set of images at presentation with focal diffusion restriction.
Anti-voltage-gated calcium channel cerebellitis.
A 71-year-old woman who underwent imaging 7 hours after onset of right hemiparesis and aphasia. A 71-year-old woman who underwent imaging 7 hours after.
Hyperacute infarction (2 hours after onset) in a 39-year-old man with the left internal carotid artery dissection presenting with right-sided weakness.
A, Right internal carotid artery angiographic approach for coiling of a right ophthalmic ICA aneurysm (black arrowhead) in a 71-year-old woman using 7.78.
 CT brain scan showing a right hemisphere total anterior circulation infarct (A) at four hours, and (B) at five days after symptom onset.  CT brain scan.
Case 2: 52 year-old man with intracranial injuries sustained in a motor vehicle accident. Case 2: 52 year-old man with intracranial injuries sustained.
A 21-year-old woman with a right sensory-motor deficit and aphasia for 60 minutes. A 21-year-old woman with a right sensory-motor deficit and aphasia for.
Presentation transcript:

FLAIR and T2

Diffusion sequence will have 3 sets of images often fused in a series and will include B0, B500, and B1000

Diffusion and ADC

What information does the Facility need? Is the infarct acute, subacute, or chronic What structures are involved (cortex, basal ganglia, thalamus, brainstem) Size of infarction small, medium, large (always also give actual measurement in cm) Describe complications (mass effect on ventricles, herniation, hemorrhagic blood products, area of potential penumbra) Don’t forget the Circle of Willis

Favoring a Chronic Infarct Ex vacuo dilation of adjacent ventricle Encephalomalacia Use prior studies Hyperintense on ADC Laminar Necrosis

Laminar Necrosis Will show cortical T1 curvilinear hyperintense signal which becomes evident after 2 weeks, peak at 1 to 3 months, and will slowly but still be visible for months to years. The high T1 signal is  caused by the accumulation of denatured proteins in dying cells and Does Not represent presence of hemorrhage.

Old Infarct Diffusion ADC T1

Differentials that appear bright on diffusion Infarction Epidermoid Tumor Bacterial Abscess Acute Demylination Tumor with high nuclear/cytoplasmic ratio Acute Encephalitis T2 Shine through Subacute Blood or high protein content Jacob Creutzfeld Disease

Infarction Timing Acute (hours-7 days) CT, T1, and T2 changes may not be apparent for up to 6 hours. Restricted diffusion and decreased ADC value is seen within minutes of onset with peak black ADC occurring 1-4 days. Subacute (1-3 weeks) ADC shows pseudo normalization to isointense peaking in 2nd week Continued restricted hyperintensity on Diffusion Chronic Diffusion becomes low signal to mildly hyperintense as T2 ADC becomes hyperintense