| Literature DB >> 29073886 |
Manuel A Schmidt1, Tobias Engelhorn2, Franz Marxreiter3, Juergen Winkler3, Stefan Lang2, Stephan Kloska2, Philipp Goelitz2, Arnd Doerfler2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The loss of the swallow-tail sign of the substantia nigra has been proposed for diagnosis of Parkinson's disease. Aim was to evaluate, if the sign occurs consistently in healthy subjects and if it can be reliably detected with high-resolution 7T susceptibility weighted imaging (SWI).Entities:
Keywords: 7 tesla; Nigrosome 1; Parkinson’s disease; SWI; Swallow-tail sign; Ultra high-field MRI
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29073886 PMCID: PMC5658950 DOI: 10.1186/s12883-017-0975-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Neurol ISSN: 1471-2377 Impact factor: 2.474
Fig. 1a Oblique-axial 1 mm MPR depicting the SN in two healthy subjects. Different slices for demonstration purposes. b Nigrosome 1 and consequently the swallow-tail sign can be readily visualized (filled arrow). c Absent swallow-tail sign (arrow)
Interpretation of the swallow-tail sign by 3 readers, y = swallow tail-sign present, n = swallow-tail absent
| Patient # R/L | reader 1 | reader 2 | reader 3 | consensus |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | y/y | y/y | y/y | y/y |
| 2 | y/y | y/y | y/y | y/y |
| 3 | n/n | y/y | y/y | y/y |
| 4 | y/y | y/y | y/y | y/y |
| 5 | y/y | y/y | y/y | y/y |
| 6 | n/y | n/y | n/y | n/y |
| 7 | y/y | y/y | y/y | y/y |
| 8 | n/n | y/y | y/y | y/y |
| 9 | n/n | n/n | n/n | n/n |
| 10 | n/n | n/n | n/n | n/n |
| 11 | y/y | y/y | y/y | y/y |
| 12 | y/y | y/y | y/y | y/y |
| 13 | n/n | y/y | n/y | y/y |
Fig. 2Inconsistent occurrence of the swallow-tail sign in healthy subjects. a-c Clearly definable swallow-tail of the dorsolateral SNc. d The swallow-tail can only be identified on the right side (filled arrow). e-f No swallow-tail sign can be detected (arrows)
Presence of the swallow-tail in healthy subjects. Accuracy against the consensus read as gold standard
|
| reader 1 | reader 2 | reader 3 |
|---|---|---|---|
| positive predictive value | 100% | 45% | 83% |
| negative predictive value | 100% | 100% | 100% |
| accuracy | 100% | 77% | 96% |
Fig. 3Healthy subject. Pulsation artifacts of the superior cerebelli artery could potentially disguise the swallow-tail sign (despite being recognizable in this case) leading to misclassification