| Literature DB >> 36248725 |
Evelien Martens1, Jelle Demeestere1, Benjamin Verhaaren1.
Abstract
Introduction: Microhemorrhages have not been described in mitochondrial encephalomyopathy with lactic acidosis and stroke-like episodes syndrome (MELAS) on magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). Main symptoms and/or important findings: A MELAS-patient had a rapid succession of 3 stroke-like episodes with dysphasia, visual field deficits and paresis of the right arm. MRI showed a lesion with corticosubcortical vasogenic edema without reduced diffusion, conforming to a stroke-like MELAS-lesion. Microhemorrhages within MELAS-lesions were detected on MRI. The main diagnoses, therapeutic interventions, and outcomes: Microhemorrhages are an atypical imaging finding in MELAS. The patient was treated with L-arginine.Entities:
Keywords: MELAS; MRI; microbleeds; microhemorrhages; stroke-like episodes
Year: 2022 PMID: 36248725 PMCID: PMC9524292 DOI: 10.5334/jbsr.2891
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Belg Soc Radiol ISSN: 2514-8281 Impact factor: 1.912
Figure 1Edema in the left temporoparietal operculum without reduced diffusivity on MRI at 3T at first presentation (4 upper images). No microhemorrhages are found on the first scan, but they are present in juxtacortical location at one-week follow-up (2 lower images).
Figure 2MRI at 3T performed three weeks later, because of a second stroke-like event. A similar lesion in the gyri of the left occipital lobe is present. Signal abnormalities in the previously affected area nearly normalized, but microhemorrhages persisted.
Figure 3One month later, seven weeks after the initial episode, a third stroke-like event occurred. MRI shows a new area of edema in the left parietal lobe including the postcentral gyrus. The new lesion shows diffusion restriction and juxtacortical microhemorrhages.