More articles from Adult Brain
- COVID-19 Is an Independent Risk Factor for Acute Ischemic Stroke
COVID-19 infection is significantly associated with imaging confirmation of acute ischemic stroke, and patients with COVID-19 should undergo more aggressive monitoring for stroke.
- Neurologic Involvement in COVID-19: Cause or Coincidence? A Neuroimaging Perspective
Despite a large cohort of 103 patients with COVID-19, the authors found a large number of symptomatic patients with negative neuroimaging findings, and no conclusions can be drawn concerning concrete associations between neuroimaging and COVID-19.
- Black Dipole or White Dipole: Using Susceptibility Phase Imaging to Differentiate Cerebral Microbleeds from Intracranial Calcifications
The authors evaluated the diagnostic accuracy of differentiating cerebral microbleeds and calcifications from phase patterns in axial locations in 31 consecutive patients undergoing both CT and MR imaging for acute infarction and exhibiting dark spots in gradient-echo magnitude images. Six patients had additional quantitative susceptibility mapping images. To determine their susceptibility, 2 radiologists separately investigated the phase patterns in the border and central sections. Among 190 gradient-echo dark spots, 62 calcifications and 128 cerebral microbleeds were detected from CT. Interobserver reliability was higher for the border phase patterns than for the central phase patterns. The sensitivity and specificity of the border phase patterns in identifying calcifications were higher than those of the central phase patterns, particularly for lesions >2.5 mm in diameter and quantitative susceptibility mapping of dark spots. They conclude that the border phase patterns were more accurate than the central phase patterns in differentiating calcifications and cerebral microbleeds and were as accurate as quantitative susceptibility mapping.
- Cerebral Venous Thrombosis Associated with COVID-19
The authors report a unique series of young patients with COVID-19 presenting with cerebral venous system thrombosis. Three patients younger than 41 years of age with confirmed Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome coronavirus 2 infection had neurologic findings related to cerebral venous thrombosis.