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

More articles from Adult Brain

  • EDITOR'S CHOICEAdult Brain
    Open Access
    Tentorial Venous Anatomy: Variation in the Healthy Population
    J.S. Rosenblum, J.M. Tunacao, V. Chandrashekhar, A. Jha, M. Neto, C. Weiss, J. Smirniotopoulos, B.R. Rosenblum and J.D. Heiss
    American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2020, 41 (10) 1825-1832; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A6775

    The authors retrospectively reviewed tentorial venous anatomy of the head using CTA/CTV performed for routine care or research purposes in 238 patients. Tentorial vein development was related to the ring configuration of the tentorial sinuses. There were 3 configurations: Groups 1A and 1B had ring configuration, while group 2 did not. Group 1A had a medialized ring configuration, and group 1B had a lateralized ring configuration. Measurements of skull base development were predictive of these groups. The ring configuration of group 1 was related to the presence of a split confluens, which correlated with a decreased internal auditory canal-petroclival fissure angle. Configuration 1A was related to the degree of petrous apex pneumatization.

  • FELLOWS' JOURNAL CLUBAdult Brain
    Open Access
    Clinical and Neuroimaging Correlation in Patients with COVID-19
    B.C. Yoon, K. Buch, M. Lang, B.P. Applewhite, M.D. Li, W.A. Mehan, T.M. Leslie-Mazwi and S.P. Rincon
    American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2020, 41 (10) 1791-1796; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A6717

    This was a retrospective study performed at a large academic hospital in the United States. A total of 641 patients presented to the authors' institution between March 3, 2020 and May 6, 2020, for treatment of coronavirus disease 2019, of whom, 150 underwent CT and/or MR imaging of the brain. CT and/or MR imaging examinations were evaluated for the presence of hemorrhage, infarction, and leukoencephalopathy. Of the 150 patients, 26 (17%) had abnormal CT and/or MR imaging findings, with hemorrhage in 11 of the patients (42%), infarction in 13 of the patients (50%), and leukoencephalopathy in 7 of the patients (27%). Significant associations were seen between abnormal CT/MR imaging findings and intensive care unit admission, intubation, and acute kidney injury.

  • EDITOR'S CHOICEAdult Brain
    You have access
    Presurgical Identification of Primary Central Nervous System Lymphoma with Normalized Time-Intensity Curve: A Pilot Study of a New Method to Analyze DSC-PWI
    A. Pons-Escoda, A. Garcia-Ruiz, P. Naval-Baudin, M. Cos, N. Vidal, G. Plans, J. Bruna, R. Perez-Lopez and C. Majos
    American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2020, 41 (10) 1816-1824; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A6761

    The aims of this study were to: 1) to design a new method of postprocessing time-intensity curves, which renders normalized curves, and 2) to test its feasibility and performance on the diagnosis of primary central nervous system lymphoma. Time-intensity curves of enhancing tumor and normal-appearing white matter were obtained for each case. Enhancing tumor time-intensity curves were normalized relative to normal-appearing white matter. The authors performed pair-wise comparisons for primary central nervous system lymphoma against the other tumor type. The best discriminatory time points of the curves were obtained through a stepwise selection. Logistic binary regression was applied to obtain prediction models. A total of 233 patients were included in the study with 47 primary central nervous system lymphomas, 48 glioblastomas, 39 anaplastic astrocytomas, 49 metastases, and 50 meningiomas. The classifiers satisfactorily performed all bilateral comparisons in the test subset. They conclude that the proposed method for DSC-PWI time-intensity curve normalization renders comparable curves beyond technical and patient variability. Normalized time-intensity curves performed satisfactorily for the presurgical identification of primary central nervous system lymphoma.

  • Adult Brain
    You have access
    Lack of Baseline Intracranial Aneurysm Wall Enhancement Predicts Future Stability: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis of Longitudinal Studies
    A.S. Larson, V.T. Lehman, G. Lanzino and W. Brinjikji
    American Journal of Neuroradiology September 2020, 41 (9) 1606-1610; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A6690
  • EDITOR'S CHOICEAdult Brain
    Open Access
    Myelin and Axonal Damage in Normal-Appearing White Matter in Patients with Moyamoya Disease
    S. Hara, M. Hori, A. Hagiwara, Y. Tsurushima, Y. Tanaka, T. Maehara, S. Aoki and T. Nariai
    American Journal of Neuroradiology September 2020, 41 (9) 1618-1624; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A6708

    Eighteen patients with Moyamoya disease (16–55 years of age) and 18 age- and sex-matched healthy controls were evaluated with myelin-sensitive MR imaging based on magnetization transfer saturation imaging and 2-shell diffusion MR imaging. The myelin volume fraction, which reflects the amount of myelin sheath; the g-ratio, which represents the ratio of the inner (axon) to the outer (axon plus myelin) diameter of the fiber; and the axon volume fraction, which reflects axonal components, were calculated and compared between the patients and controls. Compared with the healthy controls, the patients with Moyamoya disease showed a significant decrease in the myelin and axon volume fractions in many WM regions, while the increases in the g-ratio values were not statistically significant. Correlations with cognitive performance were most frequently observed with the axon volume fraction. The authors conclude that the relationship with cognitive performance might be stronger with axonal damage than with myelin damage.

  • Adult Brain
    You have access
    Assessment of Ischemic Volumes by Using Relative Filling Time Delay on CTP Source Image in Patients with Acute Stroke with Anterior Circulation Large Vessel Occlusions
    W. Cao, Y. Ling, L. Yang, F. Wu, X. Cheng and Q. Dong
    American Journal of Neuroradiology September 2020, 41 (9) 1611-1617; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A6718
  • EDITOR'S CHOICEAdult Brain
    Open Access
    Manganese-Enhanced MRI in Patients with Multiple Sclerosis
    D.J. Suto, G. Nair, D.M. Sudarshana, S.U. Steele, J. Dwyer, E.S. Beck, J. Ohayon, H. McFarland, A.P. Koretsky, I.C.M. Cortese and D.S. Reich
    American Journal of Neuroradiology September 2020, 41 (9) 1569-1576; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A6665

    Mangafodipir is a manganese chelate that was clinically approved for MR imaging of liver lesions. The authors present a case series of 6 adults with multiple sclerosis who were scanned at baseline with gadolinium, then injected with mangafodipir, and followed at variable time points. Fourteen new lesions formed during or shortly before the study, of which 10 demonstrated manganese enhancement of varying intensity, timing, and spatial pattern. One gadolinium-enhancing extra-axial mass, presumably a meningioma, also demonstrated enhancement with manganese. Manganese enhancement was detected in lesions that formed in the days after mangafodipir injection, and this enhancement persisted for several weeks. They conclude that multiple sclerosis lesions were enhanced with a temporal and spatial profile distinct from that of gadolinium.

  • Adult Brain
    Open Access
    COVID-19 and Involvement of the Corpus Callosum: Potential Effect of the Cytokine Storm?
    C. Rasmussen, I. Niculescu, S. Patel and A. Krishnan
    American Journal of Neuroradiology September 2020, 41 (9) 1625-1628; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A6680
  • Adult Brain
    Open Access
    Radiologically Isolated Syndrome: A Review for Neuroradiologists
    M. Hosseiny, S.D. Newsome and D.M. Yousem
    American Journal of Neuroradiology September 2020, 41 (9) 1542-1549; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A6649
  • Adult Brain
    Open Access
    MR Susceptibility Imaging with a Short TE (MR-SISET): A Clinically Feasible Technique to Resolve Thalamic Nuclei
    S. Chung, P. Storey, T.M. Shepherd and Y.W. Lui
    American Journal of Neuroradiology September 2020, 41 (9) 1629-1631; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A6683

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