| Literature DB >> 26696391 |
Tobias Braun1, Martin Juenemann2, Dursun Gündüz3, Stefanie Schmetsdorf4, Florian Roessler5, Astrid Grams6,7, Carolin Gramsch8, Christian Tanislav9.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Moyamoya syndrome is a vasculopathy characterised by progressive occlusion of the cerebral arteries resulting in the development of abnormal collateral circulation. To diagnose this syndrome, imaging of the cerebral arteries is required including CT- or MR-angiography and conventional angiography. We present a case of moyamoya disease with typical findings detected in the sonography. The diagnosis was suspected after reviewing the initial ultrasound images of the cerebral arteries with evidence for obliterated intracranial arteries and the detection of an existing collateral circulation network. CASEEntities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26696391 PMCID: PMC4688980 DOI: 10.1186/s12883-015-0518-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Neurol ISSN: 1471-2377 Impact factor: 2.474
Fig. 1Middle cerebral artery left (a); due to obliteration the Doppler-spectrum is low pulsatile, the corresponding detected flow velocities are also low. In contrast flow velocities detected in collaterals are higher (b)
Fig. 2Cerebral digital subtraction angiography left (a) in frontal projection. Severe stenosis of the carotid artery (black arrow); the middle cerebral artery is obliterated (red arrows). Branches of the collateral network with leptomeningeal anastomoses are indicated by white arrows. Image b demonstrates a leptomeningeal collateral branch in the duplex-sonography. The digital subtraction angiography right (c) indicates collateral vessels (white arrows) by obliterated middle and anterior cerebral artery; correspondently the transcranial duplex-sonography right (d) demonstrates numerous arterial vessels assembling the collateral network
Fig. 3Cerebral MR angiography indicates the obliteration pathology in the anterior circulation; the middle cerebral arteries are bilaterally rudimentary visible (arrows)
Fig. 4Transcranial Doppler- and duplex-sonography right, showing deteriorated Doppler-spectrum in the distal portion of the internal carotid artery (a) and proximal portion of the middle cerebral artery (b) indicating the vessel obliteration; in accordance with sonographic findings the conventional angiography (c) confirmed the obliteration of the middle cerebral artery and anterior cerebral artery (red arrows). Image (d) demonstrates the collateral network
Fig. 5Brain MRI, diffusion weighted imaging showing multiple bilateral acute ischaemia