| Literature DB >> 21207238 |
Andrea Romano1, Pugliese Silvia, Pierallini Alberto, Francesca Tavanti, Giuliano Sette, Sara La Starza, Luigi Maria Fantozzi, Alessandro Bozzao.
Abstract
We describe a case of asymmetric PRES due to the presence of hyperplastic anterior choroidal artery (AChA) in a man affected by sever hypertension. Posterior reversible encephalopathy syndrome (PRES) has become synonymous with a unique pattern of brain vasogenic edema and predominates in the parietal and occipital regions, accompanied by clinical neurological alterations. Sever hypertension is a risk factor that exceeds the limits of brain autoregulation, leading to breakthrough brain edema. In our knowledge this is the first case reported in literature, in which a similar vascular abnormality is linked to a PRES syndrome.Entities:
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Year: 2011 PMID: 21207238 PMCID: PMC3072479 DOI: 10.1007/s10194-010-0284-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Headache Pain ISSN: 1129-2369 Impact factor: 7.277
Fig. 1The first MRI (a–c) showed cortical–subcortical patchy hyperintense areas on T2 FLAIR-weighted images (a) localized in the parietal–occipital lobes with asymmetric representation for left predominance. No signal alteration was seen in DWI images (b) in presence of high signal on ADC maps indicating vasogenic edema (c). MRI exam after 3 months demonstrated complete resolution of the hyperintense areas on FLAIR-weighted (d) images and ADC maps (e). The MR-angiography of intracranic circle, performed with the 3D-TOF technique (f, g), showed the presence of left hyperplastic AChA (white arrows, tridimensional images f) supplying partially the distribution of the ipsilateral posterior cerebral artery (PCA) (arrows, tridimensional images f). In g the same anatomical abnormalities is represented by MIP reconstruction