| Literature DB >> 25204402 |
Hyun-Ji Cho, Young Jin Kim, Joon Hwa Lee, Jin Woo Choi, Won-Jin Moon, Hong Gee Roh, Young Il Chun, Hahn Young Kim.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Following carotid revascularization, an abrupt increase in cerebral blood flow may disrupt the blood-brain barrier, resulting in reperfusion injury. This damage to the blood-brain barrier may be reflected by subarachnoid enhancement on FLAIR MRI after gadolinium injection. CASEEntities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 25204402 PMCID: PMC4174251 DOI: 10.1186/s12883-014-0178-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Neurol ISSN: 1471-2377 Impact factor: 2.474
Figure 1Pre and post carotid stenting. Conventional cerebral angiography showed > 70% stenosis of the left proximal carotid artery ( A and C ). Carotid artery stenting was successfully performed (B and D). (A and B in patient 1; C and D in patient 2).
Figure 2Serial follow-up FLAIR MRI. Chronic ischemic white matter changes were observed in pre-stenting FLAIR MRI (A and F). Post-stenting FLAIR MRI performed 18–24 hours after intravenous Gd showed hyperintensities in the subarachnoid space (D and I), which resolved in 4–5 days (E and J). Post-stenting DWI showed a few small subcortical lesions (arrowheads in B and G). Slightly increased perfusion on the time-to-peak map in the left hemisphere was observed in patient 1 (C).
Figure 3Immediate FLAIR MRI after Gd injection showed diffuse leptomeningeal enhancements along the cerebral cortex of the left hemisphere (A) accompanied by signal changes in DWI (B) in patient 1.