- Diffusion MRI Improves the Accuracy of Preoperative Diagnosis of Common Pediatric Cerebellar Tumors among Reviewers with Different Experience Levels
DWI studies of 96 cerebellar pediatric tumors were analyzed by neuroradiologists and residents in radiology during 2 sessions, one that included the DWI studies and one that did not. These observers were asked to categorize the masses as: astrocytoma, medulloblastoma, ependymoma, or atypical teratoid/rhabdoid tumor. The addition of DWI resulted in significant improvement in the diagnosis of all tumors except ependymoma among all reviewers with different levels of experience.
- Incidental Findings in Youths Volunteering for Brain MRI Research
Incidental abnormalities seen in research MRI brain studies of 1400 “normal” volunteer individuals aged 8-23 years were assessed. Ten percent showed incidental findings and 12 of these required further follow-up. Findings were not related to age but whites had higher numbers of pineal cysts and males had a higher incidence of cavum septum pellucidum, which was associated with psychosis-related symptoms.