Dear Sir,I am glad that people are reading my article and raising queries on it. This is a mean of healthy interaction that can be carried out.In our manuscript, the magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) of the brain had hemorrhagic conversion of infarct in bilateral parasagittal, parietooccipital region. An acute infarct was seen in right cerebellum. There were punctate infarcts in bilateral frontal regions.These findings have been shown in the figure attached it the manuscript. I would like to point out that information given by Taheri et al., is quite different from those given our manuscript. Our patient had hemorrhagic conversion of infarct, which has not been described by Taheri et al.[1] Also, infarct in frontal lobe in case of methanolpoisoning has been described Ashan et al., only[2] as per the PubMed search.Sefidbakht et al.,[3] described bilateral necrosis of the basal ganglia along with other brain lesions as described include edema, necrosis of subcortical white and gray matter, cerebellar cortical lesions, subarachnoid hemorrhage, bilateral intracerebral hemorrhage, and diffuse cerebral edema. Again, there is not any mention of the areas and nature of lesions on MRI found in our case report.The lesions described by our case report were a combined mixture of the lesions that have been described in different case series and reports. Hemorrhagic conversion in case of infarcts in methanolpoisoning has not been described. Last, frontal infarcts in methanolpoisoning have been described in only one case report as mentioned above.
Authors: S Sefidbakht; A R Rasekhi; K Kamali; A Borhani Haghighi; A Salooti; A Meshksar; H R Abbasi; M Moghadami; S A Nabavizadeh Journal: Neuroradiology Date: 2007-02-10 Impact factor: 2.995