More articles from Adult Brain
- Magnetic Susceptibility from Quantitative Susceptibility Mapping Can Differentiate New Enhancing from Nonenhancing Multiple Sclerosis Lesions without Gadolinium Injection
In 54 patients, new T2-weighted lesions were evaluated for enhancement on conventional T1-weighted imaging with gadolinium, and their susceptibility values were measured on quantitative susceptibility mapping. Eighty-six of 133 new lesions that were gadolinium-enhancing had relative susceptibility values significantly lower than those of nonenhancing lesions. Using susceptibility values to discriminate enhancing from nonenhancing lesions showed a sensitivity of 88.4% and specificity of 91.5%, with a cutoff value of 11.2 parts per billion for QSM.
- High-Convexity Tightness Predicts the Shunt Response in Idiopathic Normal Pressure Hydrocephalus
Sixty patients with idiopathic normal pressure hydrocephalus underwent presurgical brain MR imaging and clinical evaluation before and 1 year after shunt surgery. The authors assessed the MR imaging features including Evans index, high-convexity tightness, Sylvian fissure dilation, callosal angle, focal enlargement of the cortical sulci, bumps in the lateral ventricular roof, and deep white matter and periventricular hyperintensities. Multiple linear regression analyses demonstrated that presurgical high-convexity tightness alone predicted the improvement of the clinical symptoms 1 year after surgery.