| Literature DB >> 21210991 |
Alessandro Landi1, Nicola Marotta, Cristina Mancarella, Daniele Marruzzo, Maurizio Salvati, Roberto Delfini.
Abstract
Ischemia of the basal ganglia as an immediate consequence of minor head injury in children is rare (< 2% of all ischemic stroke in childhood) and is due to vasospasm of the lenticulostriate arteries. The clinical history of these lesions is particularly favourable because they are usually small, and also because the facial-brachial-crural hemiparesis typical of this pathology usually regresses after a period ranging from several weeks to several months, despite the persistence of an ischemic area on MRI. This is due to the well known neuronal plasticity of the CNS, in particular, of the primary motor cortex. The most effective therapeutic approach appears to be the conservative one, although the best treatment regimen is still not well defined.Young patients should be closely monitored and treated conservatively with osmotic diuretics to reduce perilesional edema. At the same time, however, it is very important to exclude, by means of instrumental and laboratory studies, conditions that could favour the onset of ischemia, including emboligen heart disease, thrombophilia and acute traumatic arterial dissections. Generally speaking, the prognosis in these cases is good. The authors describe their experience treating a 10-month old baby girl, with a left lenticular nucleus ischemia and report a literature review.Entities:
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Year: 2011 PMID: 21210991 PMCID: PMC3024947 DOI: 10.1186/1824-7288-37-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ital J Pediatr ISSN: 1720-8424 Impact factor: 2.638
Figure 1Brain MRI with Gd-DTPA was performed and showed the presence of an hyperacute ischemic lesion of about 2 cm of diameter, in the left lenticular nucleus extended to the internal capsule 1A), 1B), 1C) in DWI and 1D) perfusion weighted sequences.
Figure 2MRI spectroscopy (2A), angio-MRI sequences (2B, 2C), and T1 weighted MRI with Gd-DTPA (2D). showed anterior, posterior circulation and circle of Willis vessel's perviety
Figure 3Brain MRI with Gd-DTPA performed 45 days after the first one showed a reduction of the left lenticular nucleus lesion.
Historic Cohor: Treatment, Localization and Clinical Outcomes.
| Patient | Age/Gender | First Symptom | Lesion Location (CT Scan, MRI or Both) | Treatment | Clinical Outcome (Time of Follow-up in Months) | Risk Factors |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1.5/M | Hemiparesis | Internal capsule | Conservative | Good/13 | None | |
| 1.5/M | Hemiparesis | Lentiform nucleus | Conservative | Good/13 | None | |
| 1/M | Left-sided hemiparesis | left internal capsule and corona radiata | Conservative | Good/1 | None | |
| 1/F | Left-sided hemiparesis | Right lentiform nucleus and corona radiate | Conservative | Good/3 | None | |
| 1/M | Left-sided hemiparesis | Right lentiform nucleus and corona radiate | Conservative | Good/3 | None | |
| 1.2/F | Left-sided hemiparesis | Right basal ganglia and corona radiata | Conservative | minimal pyramidal tract signs in her left side/1 | None | |
| 11/M | left upper motor neuron 7th nerve palsy and left hemiparesis | bilateral basal ganglia, internal capsule and periventricular white matter | Conservative | mild dysarthria and bilateral | None | |
| 1/M | Right hemiparesis | in left basal ganglia and internal capsule | Conservative | Good/3 | None | |
| 18/M | Right hemiparesis | left basal ganglia and internal capsule | Conservative | Good/5 | born out of 2nd degree consanguinity |
Figure 4Clinical improvement during follow up (months in the abscissa) in the patients studied in the literature review, treated conservatively.