- Cervical Spine MR Imaging Findings of Patients with Hirayama Disease in North America: A Multisite Study
The authors sought to determine if Hirayama disease in North America has the same imaging findings as it does in Asia. They assessed imaging studies in 21 patients and looked for loss of attachment of posterior dura, lower cord atrophy and high T2 signal, loss of cervical lordosis, and anterior dural shift in flexion. These 4 findings were able to discriminate patients from healthy controls. MR imaging findings in white North American patients with Hirayama disease include loss of attachment on neutral images and forward displacement of the dura with flexion. Findings are often present on neutral MR images and, in the appropriate clinical scenario, should prompt flexion MR imaging to evaluate anterior dural shift.
- Pipeline Embolization Device in Aneurysmal Subarachnoid Hemorrhage
The authors used the Pipeline device to treat 20 patients with acutely ruptured intracranial aneurysms. The most common types of aneurysms treated were blister and dysplastic/dissecting. Procedure-related morbidity/mortality overall was 15%, and 1 death directly related to the procedure occurred. Occlusion rates were 75% and 94% at 6 months and 12 months, respectively. The authors concluded that the Pipeline device offers a feasible treatment option in acute or subacute ruptured aneurysms, especially the blister type. Ruptured giant aneurysms remain challenging for both surgical and endovascular techniques; at this stage, the Pipeline device should be used with caution in this aneurysm subtype.
- Evaluating CT Perfusion Using Outcome Measures of Delayed Cerebral Ischemia in Aneurysmal Subarachnoid Hemorrhage
Ninety-six patients with SAH were evaluated with CT perfusion for cortical deficits and these were correlated with primary (permanent neurologic deficits and infarctions) and secondary (delayed cerebral ischemia manifesting as clinical deterioration) outcome measures. One-third of patients developed permanent neurologic deficits (78% showed CT perfusion defects), infarctions developed in 18% (88% had perfusion defects), and delayed cerebral ischemia was found in 50% (81% had perfusion defects). The most common perfusion abnormalities were reduced CBF and prolonged MTT.