Skip to main content
Advertisement

Main menu

  • Home
  • Content
    • Current Issue
    • Accepted Manuscripts
    • Article Preview
    • Past Issue Archive
    • Video Articles
    • AJNR Case Collection
    • Case of the Week Archive
    • Case of the Month Archive
    • Classic Case Archive
  • Special Collections
    • AJNR Awards
    • Low-Field MRI
    • Alzheimer Disease
    • ASNR Foundation Special Collection
    • Photon-Counting CT
    • View All
  • Multimedia
    • AJNR Podcasts
    • AJNR SCANtastic
    • Trainee Corner
    • MRI Safety Corner
    • Imaging Protocols
  • For Authors
    • Submit a Manuscript
    • Submit a Video Article
    • Submit an eLetter to the Editor/Response
    • Manuscript Submission Guidelines
    • Statistical Tips
    • Fast Publishing of Accepted Manuscripts
    • Graphical Abstract Preparation
    • Imaging Protocol Submission
    • Author Policies
  • About Us
    • About AJNR
    • Editorial Board
    • Editorial Board Alumni
  • More
    • Become a Reviewer/Academy of Reviewers
    • Subscribers
    • Permissions
    • Alerts
    • Feedback
    • Advertisers
    • ASNR Home

User menu

  • Alerts
  • Log in

Search

  • Advanced search
American Journal of Neuroradiology
American Journal of Neuroradiology

American Journal of Neuroradiology

ASHNR American Society of Functional Neuroradiology ASHNR American Society of Pediatric Neuroradiology ASSR
  • Alerts
  • Log in

Advanced Search

  • Home
  • Content
    • Current Issue
    • Accepted Manuscripts
    • Article Preview
    • Past Issue Archive
    • Video Articles
    • AJNR Case Collection
    • Case of the Week Archive
    • Case of the Month Archive
    • Classic Case Archive
  • Special Collections
    • AJNR Awards
    • Low-Field MRI
    • Alzheimer Disease
    • ASNR Foundation Special Collection
    • Photon-Counting CT
    • View All
  • Multimedia
    • AJNR Podcasts
    • AJNR SCANtastic
    • Trainee Corner
    • MRI Safety Corner
    • Imaging Protocols
  • For Authors
    • Submit a Manuscript
    • Submit a Video Article
    • Submit an eLetter to the Editor/Response
    • Manuscript Submission Guidelines
    • Statistical Tips
    • Fast Publishing of Accepted Manuscripts
    • Graphical Abstract Preparation
    • Imaging Protocol Submission
    • Author Policies
  • About Us
    • About AJNR
    • Editorial Board
    • Editorial Board Alumni
  • More
    • Become a Reviewer/Academy of Reviewers
    • Subscribers
    • Permissions
    • Alerts
    • Feedback
    • Advertisers
    • ASNR Home
  • Follow AJNR on Twitter
  • Visit AJNR on Facebook
  • Follow AJNR on Instagram
  • Join AJNR on LinkedIn
  • RSS Feeds

AJNR Awards, New Junior Editors, and more. Read the latest AJNR updates

Index by author

June 01, 2016; Volume 37,Issue 6
  • A
  • B
  • C
  • D
  • E
  • F
  • G
  • H
  • I
  • J
  • K
  • L
  • M
  • N
  • O
  • P
  • Q
  • R
  • S
  • T
  • U
  • V
  • W
  • X
  • Y
  • Z

  1. Duszak, R.

    1. Head and Neck Imaging
      You have access
      Same-Day Sinus and Brain CT Imaging in the Medicare Population: Are Practice Patterns Changing in Association with Medicare Policy Initiatives?
      H. Kroll, R. Duszak, J. Hemingway, D. Hughes and M. Wintermark
      American Journal of Neuroradiology June 2016, 37 (6) 1000-1004; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4670
  2. Dwyer, M.G.

    1. Adult Brain
      Open Access
      Autoimmune Comorbidities Are Associated with Brain Injury in Multiple Sclerosis
      R. Zivadinov, B. Raj, M. Ramanathan, B. Teter, J. Durfee, M.G. Dwyer, N. Bergsland, C. Kolb, D. Hojnacki, R.H. Benedict and B. Weinstock-Guttman
      American Journal of Neuroradiology June 2016, 37 (6) 1010-1016; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4681
  3. Dyke, J.P.

    1. Pediatric Neuroimaging
      Open Access
      Brain Region–Specific Degeneration with Disease Progression in Late Infantile Neuronal Ceroid Lipofuscinosis (CLN2 Disease)
      J.P. Dyke, D. Sondhi, H.U. Voss, K. Yohay, C. Hollmann, D. Mancenido, S.M. Kaminsky, L.A. Heier, K.D. Rudser, B. Kosofsky, B.J. Casey, R.G. Crystal and D. Ballon
      American Journal of Neuroradiology June 2016, 37 (6) 1160-1169; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4669
  4. Falini, A.

    1. You have access
      T1-Weighted Dynamic Contrast-Enhanced MRI Is a Noninvasive Marker of Epidermal Growth Factor Receptor vIII Status in Cancer Stem Cell–Derived Experimental Glioblastomas
      L.S. Politi, G. Brugnara, A. Castellano, M. Cadioli, L. Altabella, M. Peviani, S. Mazzoleni, A. Falini and R. Galli
      American Journal of Neuroradiology June 2016, 37 (6) E49-E51; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4774
  5. Faraco, C.C.

    1. EDITOR'S CHOICEFunctional
      Open Access
      Interrogating the Functional Correlates of Collateralization in Patients with Intracranial Stenosis Using Multimodal Hemodynamic Imaging
      B.A. Roach, M.J. Donahue, L.T. Davis, C.C. Faraco, D. Arteaga, S.-C. Chen, T.R. Ladner, A.O. Scott and M.K. Strother
      American Journal of Neuroradiology June 2016, 37 (6) 1132-1138; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4758

      The authors assessed correlations among baseline perfusion and arterial transit time artifacts, cerebrovascular reactivity, and the presence of collateral vessels on digital subtraction angiography. Arterial spin-labeling MRI and DSA were compared with BOLD MR imaging measures of hypercapnic cerebrovascular reactivity in 18 patients with symptomatic intracranial stenosis. In regions with normal-to-high signal on ASL, collateral vessel presence on DSA strongly correlated with declines in cerebrovascular reactivity (as measured on BOLD MRI). These data support the use of ASL MR imaging rather than invasive DSA to assess the presence of collateralization, even for patients with internal carotid stenosis from nonatherosclerotic etiologies. Also, collaterals identified on ASL with arterial transit artifacts correlated with decreased CVR compared with regions not perfused via collaterals.

  6. Fatterpekar, G.M.

    1. FELLOWS' JOURNAL CLUBAdult Brain
      Open Access
      New Clinically Feasible 3T MRI Protocol to Discriminate Internal Brain Stem Anatomy
      M.J. Hoch, S. Chung, N. Ben-Eliezer, M.T. Bruno, G.M. Fatterpekar and T.M. Shepherd
      American Journal of Neuroradiology June 2016, 37 (6) 1058-1065; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4685

      Track density imaging (TDI) is a novel MR imaging postprocessing technique based on high angular-resolution diffusion acquisitions that generate super-resolution images derived by whole-brain probabilistic streamline tractography. TDI and echo modulation curve T2 mapping were combined with simultaneous multisection acquisition to reveal anatomic detail at 7 canonical levels of the brain stem. Compared with conventional MR imaging contrasts, many individual brain stem tracts and nuclear groups were directly visualized for the first time at 3T.

  7. Forman, H.P.

    1. You have access
      Regarding “Cerebral Angiography for Evaluation of Patients with CT Angiogram-Negative Subarachnoid Hemorrhage: An 11-Year Experience”
      X. Wu, V.B. Kalra, H.P. Forman, C.C. Matouk, G. Mongelluzzo, R. Liu and A. Malhotra
      American Journal of Neuroradiology June 2016, 37 (6) E52-E53; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4794
  8. Forslin, Y.

    1. Adult Brain
      Open Access
      Incidence of Radiologically Isolated Syndrome: A Population-Based Study
      Y. Forslin, T. Granberg, A. Antwan Jumah, S. Shams, P. Aspelin, M. Kristoffersen-Wiberg, J. Martola and S. Fredrikson
      American Journal of Neuroradiology June 2016, 37 (6) 1017-1022; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4660
    2. EDITOR'S CHOICEAdult Brain
      Open Access
      Clinical Feasibility of Synthetic MRI in Multiple Sclerosis: A Diagnostic and Volumetric Validation Study
      T. Granberg, M. Uppman, F. Hashim, C. Cananau, L.E. Nordin, S. Shams, J. Berglund, Y. Forslin, P. Aspelin, S. Fredrikson and M. Kristoffersen-Wiberg
      American Journal of Neuroradiology June 2016, 37 (6) 1023-1029; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4665

      SyMRI is a quantitative synthetic MR imaging method where a single saturation recovery TSE sequence is used to estimate the proton density, longitudinal relaxation rate, and transverse relaxation rate and allows for a free range of synthetic weightings. Twenty patients with MS and 20 healthy controls were enrolled and synthetic MR imaging was implemented on a Siemens 3T scanner. Diagnostic accuracy, lesion detection, and artifacts were assessed by blinded neuroradiologic evaluation, and CNR by manual tracing. Synthetic PD-, T1-, and T2-weighted images were of sufficient or good quality and were acquired in 7% less time than with conventional MRI. Synthetic FLAIR images suffered from artifacts. Also, synthetic MRI provided segmentations with the shortest processing time (16 seconds) and the lowest repeatability error for brain volume. Synthetic MRI can be an alternative to conventional MRI for generating diagnostic PD-, T1-, and T2-weighted images in patients with MS with fast and robust volumetric measurements.

  9. Fredrikson, S.

    1. Adult Brain
      Open Access
      Incidence of Radiologically Isolated Syndrome: A Population-Based Study
      Y. Forslin, T. Granberg, A. Antwan Jumah, S. Shams, P. Aspelin, M. Kristoffersen-Wiberg, J. Martola and S. Fredrikson
      American Journal of Neuroradiology June 2016, 37 (6) 1017-1022; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4660
    2. EDITOR'S CHOICEAdult Brain
      Open Access
      Clinical Feasibility of Synthetic MRI in Multiple Sclerosis: A Diagnostic and Volumetric Validation Study
      T. Granberg, M. Uppman, F. Hashim, C. Cananau, L.E. Nordin, S. Shams, J. Berglund, Y. Forslin, P. Aspelin, S. Fredrikson and M. Kristoffersen-Wiberg
      American Journal of Neuroradiology June 2016, 37 (6) 1023-1029; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4665

      SyMRI is a quantitative synthetic MR imaging method where a single saturation recovery TSE sequence is used to estimate the proton density, longitudinal relaxation rate, and transverse relaxation rate and allows for a free range of synthetic weightings. Twenty patients with MS and 20 healthy controls were enrolled and synthetic MR imaging was implemented on a Siemens 3T scanner. Diagnostic accuracy, lesion detection, and artifacts were assessed by blinded neuroradiologic evaluation, and CNR by manual tracing. Synthetic PD-, T1-, and T2-weighted images were of sufficient or good quality and were acquired in 7% less time than with conventional MRI. Synthetic FLAIR images suffered from artifacts. Also, synthetic MRI provided segmentations with the shortest processing time (16 seconds) and the lowest repeatability error for brain volume. Synthetic MRI can be an alternative to conventional MRI for generating diagnostic PD-, T1-, and T2-weighted images in patients with MS with fast and robust volumetric measurements.

  10. Galli, R.

    1. You have access
      T1-Weighted Dynamic Contrast-Enhanced MRI Is a Noninvasive Marker of Epidermal Growth Factor Receptor vIII Status in Cancer Stem Cell–Derived Experimental Glioblastomas
      L.S. Politi, G. Brugnara, A. Castellano, M. Cadioli, L. Altabella, M. Peviani, S. Mazzoleni, A. Falini and R. Galli
      American Journal of Neuroradiology June 2016, 37 (6) E49-E51; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4774
« Previous (Pages : 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 ... 24) Next »
Back to top
PreviousNext

In this issue

American Journal of Neuroradiology: 37 (6)
American Journal of Neuroradiology
Vol. 37, Issue 6
1 Jun 2016
  • Table of Contents
  • Index by author
  • Complete Issue (PDF)
Sign up for alerts
Advertisement
  • Letters
  • Most Read
  • Most Cited
Loading
Advertisement

Indexed Content

  • Current Issue
  • Accepted Manuscripts
  • Article Preview
  • Past Issues
  • Editorials
  • Editor's Choice
  • Fellows' Journal Club
  • Letters to the Editor
  • Video Articles

Cases

  • Case Collection
  • Archive - Case of the Week
  • Archive - Case of the Month
  • Archive - Classic Case

More from AJNR

  • Trainee Corner
  • Imaging Protocols
  • MRI Safety Corner
  • Book Reviews

Multimedia

  • AJNR Podcasts
  • AJNR Scantastics

Resources

  • Turnaround Time
  • Submit a Manuscript
  • Submit a Video Article
  • Submit an eLetter to the Editor/Response
  • Manuscript Submission Guidelines
  • Statistical Tips
  • Fast Publishing of Accepted Manuscripts
  • Graphical Abstract Preparation
  • Imaging Protocol Submission
  • Evidence-Based Medicine Level Guide
  • Publishing Checklists
  • Author Policies
  • Become a Reviewer/Academy of Reviewers
  • News and Updates

About Us

  • About AJNR
  • Editorial Board
  • Editorial Board Alumni
  • Alerts
  • Permissions
  • Not an AJNR Subscriber? Join Now
  • Advertise with Us
  • Librarian Resources
  • Feedback
  • Terms and Conditions
  • AJNR Editorial Board Alumni

American Society of Neuroradiology

  • Not an ASNR Member? Join Now

© 2025 by the American Society of Neuroradiology All rights, including for text and data mining, AI training, and similar technologies, are reserved.
Print ISSN: 0195-6108 Online ISSN: 1936-959X

Powered by HighWire