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Spontaneous and Unruptured Chronic Intracranial Artery Dissection.

Authors :
Jung, Seung Chai
Kim, Ho Sung
Choi, Choong-Gon
Kim, Sang Joon
Kwon, Sun U.
Kang, Dong-Wha
Kim, Jong S.
Source :
Clinical Neuroradiology; Jun2018, Vol. 28 Issue 2, p171-181, 11p
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

Purpose: The aim of this article is to present high-resolution magnetic resonance imaging (HR-MRI) findings of chronic stage spontaneous and unruptured intracranial artery dissection (ICAD).Material and Methods: From March 2012 to April 2016 a total of 29 patients (15 male and14 female, age range 37-68 years) with chronic stage spontaneous and unruptured ICAD (vertebral artery 27, posterior inferior cerebellar artery 1 and middle cerebral artery 1) were retrospectively enrolled. Patients underwent HR-MRI more than 2 months (median interval 564 days, range 69-391 days) after symptom onset and were diagnosed at symptom onset or at the first imaging acquisition, which included luminal angiography and/or HR-MRI with clinical information. The HR-MRI findings were evaluated against those of luminal angiography on the basis of the lumen wall morphology, including thickening, contrast enhancement and residual dissection.Results: The HR-MRI findings were classified into complete normalization (normal lumen and wall with or without mild enhancement, n = 6), complete normalization with minimal wall changes (focal wall thickening with enhancement but normal luminal angiography, n = 8), incomplete normalization (focal wall thickening with enhancement with dilatation and stenosis on luminal angiography, n = 4), dissecting aneurysm (fusiform aneurysm with residual dissection findings, n = 8) and occlusion (small outer arterial diameter with diffuse contrast enhancement, n = 3).Conclusion: The use of HR-MRI can demonstrate the distinguishing morphological features of chronic stage of spontaneous and unruptured ICAD as complete normalization, complete normalization with minimal wall changes, incomplete normalization, dissecting aneurysm and occlusion. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
18691439
Volume :
28
Issue :
2
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Clinical Neuroradiology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
129833492
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00062-016-0544-x