Susana Calle1, Eliana Bonfante1, Garrett Simmons1, Jason Rogers1, Clark Sitton1, Katrina Hughes2, Ramesh M Papanna3, Roy Riascos1, Rajan Patel1. 1. From the Division of Neuroradiology, Department of Diagnostic and Interventional Imaging. 2. Division of Pediatric Radiology, Department of Diagnostic and Interventional Imaging. 3. Division of Fetal Intervention, Department of Obstetrics, Gynecology and Reproductive Sciences, The University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston, Houston, TX.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: Our objective is to document the imaging appearance in the intracranial compartment at the time of the infants' first postnatal brain MR imaging after fetal repair for spinal dysraphisms. METHODS: Twenty-nine patients were evaluated on fetal and postnatal magnetic resonance imaging for a series of features of Chiari II malformation. RESULTS: Of the 29 infants, 55% had resolution of tonsillar ectopia, and 62% showed a dorsal outpouching of the near the foramen magnum on postnatal magnetic resonance imaging. The majority had persistence of Chiari II features including: prominent massa intermedia (93%), tectal beaking (93%), towering cerebellum (55%), flattening of the fourth ventricle (90%), hypoplastic tentorium (97%), and tonsillar hypoplasia (59%). CONCLUSIONS: Normally positioned or minimally descended, oftentimes hypoplastic tonsils in the presence of a posterior fossa configuration typical of Chiari II, was the most common presentation. An additional documented feature was an outpouching of the dorsal thecal sac between the opisthion and the posterior arch of C1.
OBJECTIVE: Our objective is to document the imaging appearance in the intracranial compartment at the time of the infants' first postnatal brain MR imaging after fetal repair for spinal dysraphisms. METHODS: Twenty-nine patients were evaluated on fetal and postnatal magnetic resonance imaging for a series of features of Chiari II malformation. RESULTS: Of the 29 infants, 55% had resolution of tonsillar ectopia, and 62% showed a dorsal outpouching of the near the foramen magnum on postnatal magnetic resonance imaging. The majority had persistence of Chiari II features including: prominent massa intermedia (93%), tectal beaking (93%), towering cerebellum (55%), flattening of the fourth ventricle (90%), hypoplastic tentorium (97%), and tonsillar hypoplasia (59%). CONCLUSIONS: Normally positioned or minimally descended, oftentimes hypoplastic tonsils in the presence of a posterior fossa configuration typical of Chiari II, was the most common presentation. An additional documented feature was an outpouching of the dorsal thecal sac between the opisthion and the posterior arch of C1.
Authors: Nada Mufti; Adalina Sacco; Michael Aertsen; Fred Ushakov; Sebastian Ourselin; Dominic Thomson; Jan Deprest; Andrew Melbourne; Anna L David Journal: Neuroradiology Date: 2021-11-18 Impact factor: 2.804