1. Microbleeding in the Head of Caudate Nuclei of a Patient with Hypertension
- Author
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Keiji Shimizu, Yoriko Murata, Hikaru Mizobuchi, Shoji Yoshida, Seisho Takeuchi, and Hironobu Ue
- Subjects
hypertension ,head of caudate nuclei ,cerebral bleeding ,Internal Medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,In patient ,Cerebral Hemorrhage ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Nodule (medicine) ,General Medicine ,Middle Aged ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Radiography ,Treatment Outcome ,T2*-weighted gradient echo MRI ,Hemosiderin ,Angiography ,Female ,Caudate Nucleus ,medicine.symptom ,Abnormality ,Nuclear medicine ,business ,Cerebral Bleeding ,Gradient echo - Abstract
headache for one month. MRI revealed a small expanded nodule in the head of the right caudate nuclei (Fig. 1). It was hyper intense on both T1(left) and T2-weighted (right) images. Bleeding was suspected, however, other causes including tumor could not be excluded at this time. Subsequent angiography showed no abnormality. Her symptom disappeared gradually without any treatment. Four weeks later, T2*-weighted gradient echo (GRE) MRI was performed (Fig. 2). Many small round lesions with signal loss were found in the head of the caudate nuclei (left), and in other deep structures (right). Such multifocal small hypointense lesions on T2*-weighted GRE MRI are made from hemosiderin after microbleeding. These microbleedings sometimes occur in patients with hypertension. She was diagnosed as having microbleeding due to hypertension. Although microbleeding in the head of the caudate nuclei is uncommon, it should be always considered in patients with hypertension. T2*-weighted GRE MRI was very useful in confirming the diagnosis.
- Published
- 2004
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