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  • 1995-1999  (10,312)
  • 1890-1899
  • 1997  (10,312)
  • Chemistry  (10,047)
  • Magnetic resonance imaging  (137)
  • Rat
Material
Years
  • 1995-1999  (10,312)
  • 1890-1899
Year
  • 1
    ISSN: 1530-0358
    Keywords: Rectal cancer ; Computed tomography ; Radiotherapy ; Endorectal ultrasound ; Staging ; Magnetic resonance imaging
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract PURPOSE: The postradiation preoperative staging results of 25 patients with rectal cancer who were found to have Stage T0,N0 lesions after surgery were examined. Our aim was to assess the ability of preoperative staging following radiation therapy to predict the absence of disease. METHODS: From 1983 to 1994, 25 patients treated with preoperative radiation therapy for biopsy-proven rectal cancer were found to have no pathologic evidence of disease in the resected specimen (T0,N0). The preoperative postradiation disease staging results of these patients were compared with the postoperative pathologic findings. Each patient received 4,500 to 5,580 cGy during a five-week to six-week period, and four patients had preoperative chemotherapy. Surgical resection was performed six to eight weeks after completion of radiation therapy. All 25 patients were staged by digital rectal examination before surgery. In addition, 13 patients were assessed using computed tomography, 6 by endorectal ultrasound, and 1 by magnetic resonance imaging. RESULTS: Most irradiated lesions were overstaged by radiologic assessment and physical examination. No technique could reliably distinguish between postradiation fibrosis and residual cancer. The negative predictive value for digital rectal examination was 24 percent. Computed tomography accurately staged 23 percent of lesions, and endorectal ultrasound predicted 17 percent of lesions correctly. The single patient evaluated by magnetic resonance imaging was overstaged and thought to have a T2 lesion. CONCLUSIONS: Our ability to assess local eradication of rectal cancer following radiation therapy remains poor. Conventional imaging and clinical examination techniques are unable to safely predict which patients do not require surgical excision following curative radiation therapy for rectal cancer.
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  • 2
    ISSN: 1530-0358
    Keywords: Rat ; Intraperitoneal ; 5-Fluorouracil ; Chlorhexidine ; Perforated colorectal cancer ; Recurrence
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract PURPOSE: Colorectal cancer is a prevalent and mortal disease, resulting in nearly 55,000 deaths in the United States annually. Preoperative or intraoperative spillage of tumor cells because of perforation occurs in up to 10 percent of cases. When this spillage occurs, the chance of recurrence and death is dramatically increased. METHODS: In an effort to reduce the chance of recurrence and death, we used a rat model to evaluate the efficacies of intraperitoneal 5-fluorouracil and chlorhexidine in reducing the incidence of recurrence. Rats were injected with 10 mg/kg azoxymethane subcutaneously weekly for 12 weeks to induce colorectal cancers. At 20 weeks, subtotal colectomies were performed on rats with colorectal tumors and without peritoneal implants or liver metastases. At the time of surgery, a cut portion of the tumor was placed in the abdomen for 30 minutes; the rats then randomly received peritoneal irrigation with 5-fluorouracil, chlorhexidine, or sterile water (control). Eight weeks postoperatively a necropsy was performed. At that time, obvious and suspected recurrences and the anastomotic area were sampled for histologic evaluation. RESULTS: Significant differences were seen with chlorhexidine vs.water for gross tumor (P=0.05) and microscopic tumor (P 〈0.05). 5-Fluorouracil showed a greater rate of abscess formation vs.both control and chlorhexidine (P 〉0.05). CONCLUSIONS: Use of chlorhexidine intraperitoneal therapy at the time of the operation for perforated colorectal cancer significantly decreases the frequency of gross tumor recurrence but not total recurrences. Intraperitoneal 5-fluorouracil does not significantly decrease recurrence and may increase the risk of abscess when used intraoperatively.
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  • 3
    ISSN: 1435-1803
    Keywords: Rat ; collagen ; developed pressure ; pressure-volume relationships ; extracellular matrix
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract Objectives: The impact of acute collagen disruption by the disulfide donor, 5,5′-dithio-2-nitrobenzoic acid (DTNB) on ventricular properties was tested in rat hearts.Methods: Collagen was degraded acutely in 13 isolated, isovlumically contracting rat hearts by perfusion with 1 mM DTNB added to Krebs-Henseleit solution for 1 hour followed by 2-hour perfusion with normal solution. Another 13 hearts were perfused with normal solution for 3 hours (Control).Results: Collagen content was 3.5±0.5% of ventricular dry weight in control group compared with 2.1±0.4% in DTNB group (decrease by 40%, p〈0.01). Scanning electron micrographs revealed loss of the delicate collagen network surrounding muscle fibers in DTNB treated hearts. Developed pressure at a fixed volume decreased to 86±17% of the baseline value after 3-hour perfusion in the control group, whereas in DTNB treated hearts developed pressure fell to 68±13% (p〈0.01). End-diastolic pressure was set at 5 mmHg at the beginning of the experiment and rose to 15±8 mmHg in control and 30±13 mmHg (p〈0.01) in the treated hearts. Concomitantly, wet-to-dry weight ratio increased from 5.63±0.26 in control to 6.07±0.11 (p〈0.05) in the DTNB treated hearts. A separate set of experiments on isolated myocytes excluded the possibility of a direct effect of DTNB on myocyte contractile function.Conclusions: These data suggested that with 40% collagen disruption by DTNB there is a significant increase in tissue edema that results in a decrease in chamber capacitance; in addition, there is a significant decrease in systolic performance which reflects the combined effect of edema and loss of collagen.
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  • 4
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Surgical and radiologic anatomy 19 (1997), S. 105-109 
    ISSN: 1279-8517
    Keywords: Brain asymmetry ; Fornix ; Magnetic resonance imaging
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract This article reports the observation that there is a left/right asymmetry of the anterior columns of the fornix in the human brain. This asymmetry is present in the position of the two columns of the fornix in relation to the septum pellucidum. The left columna fornicis was found to be located caudal to the right, and this can be readily visualized on axial MRI scans. This difference was seen in most of the subjects, but in some subjects there was no left/right-difference and in a few the asymmetry was inverse. The asymmetry of the fornix with respect to the anterior-posterior axis was independent of the well-known dissimilar lateral ventricular volumes. However, the left/right difference in the position of the fornix was evident in subjects with or without differences in ventricular volumes. This suggests that the mechanism underlying the development of asymmetry of the fornix is independent of the mechanism leading to ventricular asymmetry. So far, no functional relevance has been ascribed to such differences in location. The finding is gaining interest in connection with recent reports of asymmetries in hippocampal subfields. Studies of fornical lesions should therefore give attention to possible side-to-side differences.
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  • 5
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Surgical and radiologic anatomy 19 (1997), S. 105-109 
    ISSN: 1279-8517
    Keywords: Brain asymmetry ; Fornix ; Magnetic resonance imaging
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Description / Table of Contents: Résumé Cet article rapporte l'existence d'une asymétrie droite/gauche des colonnes du fornix chez l'Homme. Cette asymétrie apparaît dans les plans en relation avec le septum pellucidum. Le pilier gauche du fornix apparaît en position plus caudale que le droit et ceci peut être bien visualisé sur des coupes IRM axiales. Cette différence existait chez la plupart des sujets. Chez certains, il n'y avait pas de différence gauche/droite et chez quelques sujets, l'asymétrie était inversée. L'asymétrie du fornix dans le sens antéropostérieur était indépendante de l'asymétrie bien connue des volumes ventriculaires latéraux. Quoi qu'il en soit, l'asymétrie droite/gauche de la position des piliers du fornix était évidente chez les sujets qui présentaient où ne présentaient pas de différence de volume ventriculaire. Ceci suggère que le mécanisme sousjacent du développement de l'asymétrie du fornix est indépendante du mécanisme conduisant à l'asymétrie ventriculaire. De plus, aucune conséquence fonctionnelle n'a été décrite en rapport avec de telle différence. Ces résultats sont rapprochés aux études récentes concernant les asymétries des champs hippocampiques. Les études de lésions du fornix devraient par la suite tenir compte de ces différences droite ou gauche.
    Notes: Summary This article reports the observation that there is a left/right asymmetry of the anterior columns of the fornix in the human brain. This asymmetry is present in the position of the two columns of the fornix in relation to the septum pellucidum. The left columna fornicis was found to be located caudal to the right, and this can be readily visualized on axial MRI scans. This difference was seen in most of the subjects, but in some subjects there was no left/right-difference and in a few the asymmetry was inverse. The asymmetry of the fornix with respect to the anterior-posterior axis was independent of the well-known dissimilar lateral ventricular volumes. However, the left/right difference in the position of the fornix was evident in subjects with or without differences in ventricular volumes. This suggests that the mechanism underlying the development of asymmetry of the fornix is independent of the mechanism leading to ventricular asymmetry. So far, no functional relevance has been ascribed to such differences in location. The finding is gaining interest in connection with recent reports of asymmetries in hippocampal subfields. Studies of fornical lesions should therefore give attention to possible side-to-side differences.
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  • 6
    ISSN: 1438-1435
    Keywords: Cervical vertebrae ; Facet dislocation ; Computed tomography ; Magnetic resonance imaging ; Diagnostic imaging ; Joint injury
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract We describe neural foraminal enlargement as a radiologic sign indicating bilateral interfacetal dislocation or subluxation injuries (BID/S) of the lower cervical spine on axial images. Axial neural formainal width was measured by computed tomography or magnetic resonance imaging in 10 patients with BID/S and compared with measurements in 20 control patients. In both the BID/S patients and controls, the size of the foramina at the injured level was compared with the foramina at levels immediately above and below the injury. These measurements were compared for statistical significance using Student's t-test. The width of the injured foramina averaged 10.4 mm in BID/S and 5.3 mm in controls (P〈0.001). The enlargement in the BID/S cases relative to foramina above and below the injured level was statistically significant. The sign was also assessed qualitatively for detection of BID/S by three reviewers blindly analyzing 19 cases (9 BID/S and 10 controls) for signs of widened neural foramina. The pooled blinded review yielded a sensitivity of 81% and a specificity of 83% for neural foraminal enlargement as a sign indicative of BID/S. We describe enlargement, of neural foramina as a radiologic sign corroborative of BID/S on axial images.
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  • 7
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Emergency radiology 4 (1997), S. 249-254 
    ISSN: 1438-1435
    Keywords: Infarction ; Stroke ; Transient ischemic attack ; Diffusion imaging ; Magnetic resonance imaging
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract This article attempts to answer the most common questions on the use of diffusion magnetic resonance imaging to distinguish between acute cerebral infarction and transient ischemic attack in patients who present with the symptoms of stroke.
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  • 8
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Naunyn-Schmiedeberg's archives of pharmacology 356 (1997), S. 166-172 
    ISSN: 1432-1912
    Keywords: Key words Catalepsy ; VM nucleus ; Kainic lesions ; Pontine reticular formation ; Rat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract Bilateral kainic acid lesions of the ventro-medial (VM) thalamic nucleus of rats which greatly reduced the catalepsy produced by haloperidol (2 mg/kg i.p.) not only did not reduce, but even enhanced, the cataleptogenic effect of eserine (1 mg/kg i.p.) and arecoline (30 mg/kg i.p.). This finding is in accord with former conclusions that catalepsy produced by cholinergic drugs does not depend on striatal mechanisms. In rats with kainic acid lesions of the VM thalamic nucleus, and similarly in intact, non-lesioned rats, systemic administration of eserine and arecoline potentiated the catalepsy produced by microinjections of carbachol (2 μg) into the pontine reticular formation (PRF). Atropine microinjected bilaterally into the PRF attenuated the cataleptogenic effect of eserine and arecoline i.p. We suggest that the PRF is a site at which systemically given cholinergic drugs act to produce catalepsy.
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  • 9
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Naunyn-Schmiedeberg's archives of pharmacology 356 (1997), S. 364-367 
    ISSN: 1432-1912
    Keywords: Key words Capsaicin ; CGRP (calcitonin ; gene-related peptide) ; Endothelium-dependent ; relaxation ; Thoracic aorta ; Rat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract Previous studies have shown that pretreatment with calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP), a principal transmitter in sensory nerves, can protect the endothelial cell. We therefore evaluated whether in vivo capsaicin treatment prevents endothelial damage elicited by lysophosphatidylcholine (LPC) in the rat aorta. Acute treatment or repeated pretreatment with capsaicin resulted in stimulation of neurotransmitter release from sensory nerves or depletion of their transmitter content respectively. Vasodilator responses to acetylcholine (ACh) were examined in the aorta of these animals. Acute application of capsaicin (50 mg/kg) increased the plasma concentration of CGRP-like immunoreactivity (CGRP-LI) concomitantly with a reversal of the inhibition by LPC of endothelium-dependent ACh-induced relaxation in the isolated rat aorta. After repeated pretreatment with capsaicin to deplete sensory nerve neurotransmitter content the effects of capsaicin were absent as shown by the plasma CGRP-LI concentration and the vasodilator response to ACh. The results demonstrate that systemic capsaicin treatment, which evokes the release of CGRP from sensory nerves, protects the endothelial cell. The present study also suggests that CGRP may be an endogenous vascular protective substance.
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  • 10
    ISSN: 1432-1912
    Keywords: Key words Neuropeptide Y (NPY) ; Ca2+ efflux ; Y1 receptor ; Na+/Ca2+ exchange ; Na+ influx ; Cardiomyocyte ; Rat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract Several physiological stimuli cause a rise in intracellular Ca2+ concentration ([Ca2+]i) in cardiomyocytes. This increased [Ca2+]i must be restored to physiological resting level to ensure response to further stimuli. In the present study, we examined the effect of neuropeptide Y (NPY), which is secreted from certain adrenergic or non-adrenergic neurons, on Ca2+ efflux from freshly isolated, quiescent adult rat cardiomyocytes. The isolated cardiomyocytes were preloaded with 45CaCl2 for 1 h. Then, the fractional release of 45Ca2+ from the cells was measured. NPY stimulated the efflux of 45Ca2+ from isolated adult rat cardiomyocytes in a concentration-dependent manner (10–8 M to 10–6 M). NPY (10–6 M)-induced Ca2+ efflux was 2.0 ± 0.16% of the total cellular content. The 45Ca2+ efflux from the cells was also stimulated by Y1 receptor agonist, [Leu31, Pro34]NPY, but not by Y2 receptor agonist, NPY13–36. The effect of NPY was inhibited by a peptide NPY inhibitor, NPY18–36 and a non-peptide NPY inhibitor, benextramine to a similar extent. From these results, it is conceivable that the effect of NPY on Ca2+ efflux from cardiomyocytes is mediated through Y1 receptors. It was also observed that NPY caused a rise in [Ca2+]i to almost 150 nM. NPY-stimulated 45Ca2+ efflux was not affected by removal of extracellular Ca2+, but was dependent on the presence of extracellular Na+. Moreover, NPY caused a 22Na+ influx into the cells of about 1.6-fold over the basal value which was inhibited by amiloride and 5-(N,N-dimethyl)-amiloride, known Na+/Ca2+ exchange inhibitors. In addition, isoproterenol also caused 45Ca2+ efflux from the cells and which was enhanced by the addition of NPY. These results suggest that NPY stimulates extracellular Na+-dependent 45Ca2+ efflux from freshly isolated adult rat cardiomyocytes, probably through its stimulatory effect on plasma membrane Y1 receptors with which NPY may couple during Na+/Ca2+ exchange.
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  • 11
    ISSN: 1432-1912
    Keywords: Key words 5-Hydroxytryptamine ; 5-HT1A receptors ; Microdialysis ; Flesinoxan ; WAY 100635 ; 8-OH-DPAT ; Rat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract The modulation of extracellular 5-hydroxytryptamine (5-HT) in the central nucleus of the amygdala (CeA) by 5-HT1A receptors was studied by intracerebral microdialysis in awake and freely moving rats. Local administration of 1 μM tetrodotoxin (TTX), 60 mM K+ and perfusion with Ca2+-free Ringer containing EGTA confirmed that the major part of dialysate 5-HT levels from the CeA is of neuronal origin. Administration of 300 nM of RU 24969, a 5-HT1B receptor agonist, through the probe into the CeA decreased dialysate 5-HT levels to 67.2% of the baseline value. Systemic administration of the 5-HT1A receptor agonists 8-OH-DPAT and flesinoxan dose-dependently decreased 5-HT levels in the CeA. The effect of 0.3 mg/kg of flesinoxan could be completely antagonized by systemic administration of 0.05 mg/kg WAY 100635, a 5-HT1A receptor antagonist. WAY 100635 alone had only minimal effects at this dose. These data show that a major part of the extracellular 5-HT in the CeA stems from 5-HT neurons and that the amount of 5-HT released into this brain region can be modulated by 5-HT1A receptors.
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  • 12
    ISSN: 1432-0843
    Keywords: Key words Anthracyclines ; Daunorubicin ; Daunorubicinol ; Pharmacokinetics ; Rat ; Aging
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract  Age-related differences in pharmacokinetics may be important in determining altered anthracycline cardiotoxicity in the senescent rat and also in older humans. This study examined the effect of aging on daunorubicin pharmacokinetics in the Fischer 344 rat. Daunorubicin 7.5 mg/kg was administered i.v. to 6-and 24-month-old male Fischer 344 rats and plasma and tissue sampling was performed over 168 h for assay of daunorubicin and daunorubicinol concentrations by high-performance liquid chromatography. Systemic clearance of daunorubicin was decreased in older compared to younger animals (56±4 versus 202±17 ml min-1 kg-1; P〈0.05). In addition, the area under the plasma daunorubicinol concentration/time curve was significantly increased in older rats. In the heart, the area under the concentration/time curve was significantly increased in senescence both in the case of daunorubicin (201±12 versus 86±4 μg h g-1; P〈0.05) and daunorubicinol (1347±118 versus 182±4 μg h g-1; P〈0.05). Furthermore, the peak mean concentrations of daunorubicin were increased in older compared to younger rats both in plasma (1078±82 versus 663±66 ng ml-1; P〈0.05) and in heart (27±1 versus 10±1 μg g-1; P〈0.05). This also was true for daunorubicinol in plasma (284±39 versus 168±27 ng ml-1; P〈0.05) and in myocardium (8.6±0.6 versus 2.4±0.2 μg g-1; P〈0.05). Following daunorubicin injection, the ratio of daunorubicinol to daunorubicin concentrations in tissues increased with time, particularly in plasma and heart in senescent rats. Thus, there are significant age-related changes in daunorubicin and daunorubicinol kinetics in the rat that could alter susceptibility to acute systemic toxicity and to chronic cardiotoxicity.
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  • 13
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Der Orthopäde 26 (1997), S. 59-66 
    ISSN: 1433-0431
    Keywords: Schlüsselwörter Hüftluxation ; Kernspintomographie ; Computertomographie ; Reposition ; Normalwerte ; Key words Hip dysplasia ; Magnetic resonance imaging ; Computed tomography ; Reduction
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Description / Table of Contents: Summary Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and computed tomography (CT) are useful techniques for the objective documentation of the relation between the femoral head and the acetabulum after closed or open reduction of a developmental dislocation of the hip joint. Before the ossification nucleus of the femoral head is sufficiently developed, MRI is preferred. For the evaluation of reduction from the 2nd year on, MRI and CT are equivalent. However, in older children MRI may also be indicated for the evaluation of cartilaginous structures or the diagnosis of femoral head necrosis. CT in older patients may also be useful for 30 analysis of bony structures, e. g. for planning complex osteotomies.
    Notes: Zusammenfassung Kernspintomogramm (MRI) und Computertomogramm (CT) sind geeignete Methoden zur objektiven Erfassung der Zentrierung nach offener oder geschlossener Reposition einer Hüftgelenkluxation und können in besonderen Situationen die Arthrographie ersetzen. Bis zur ausreichenden Ossifikation der Hüftkopfkerne, d. h. im 1. Lebensjahr, ist dem MRI der Vorzug zu geben. Vom 2. Lebensjahr an ist für die Beurteilung des Repositionsergebnisses das CT gleichwertig. Beim älteren Kind kann das MRI aber auch indiziert sein für die Beurteilung der knorpeligen Hüftstrukturen oder zur Diagnose einer Femurkopfnekrose. In höherem Alter können durch eine aufwendige CT-Untersuchung die knöchernen Verhältnisse auch dreidimensional dargestellt werden, z. B. zur Planung komplexer Korrekturosteotomien.
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  • 14
    ISSN: 1433-044X
    Keywords: Schlüsselwörter Thorakolumbale Wirbelfraktur ; Instabilität ; Bandscheibendegeneration ; Magnetresonanztomographie ; Key words Thoracolumbar fracture ; Instability ; Disc degeneration ; Magnetic resonance imaging
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Description / Table of Contents: To analyse the possible injuries of vertebral segments, especially the disc, after unstable thoracolumbar fractures stabilised with AO internal fixator, we performed magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) of the traumatised region after implant removal. There were two aspects of disc degeneration (DD): (1) biochemical changes and (2) structural damage. MRI detects biochemical processes as one aspect of DD that is often small even in the presence of greater structural damage of the nucleus pulposus caused by fracture. None of the patients presented with structural failure of the anulus fibrosus, which is the essential structural component of the vertebral segments with regard to stability. We observed biochemical changes more often in the lower of the two fracture-adjacent discs and alterations of discal shape more often in the upper of the two, whereas loss of height concerned both discs to approximately the same degree. The supporters of upper-disc resection in thoracolumbar fractures justify their procedure among other things with the structural disc damage, such as alteration of shape and loss of height (altogether more frequent in the upper disc). Our observations that a disc with a structurally altered nucleus pulposus can be biochemically intact and can show an intact anulus fibrosus are arguments in favour of disc preservation. With regard to the upper disc, the widespread opinion that complete and regular disc damage requires a resection has to be revised. The question of whether the lower disc should be resected more often because of its greater biochemical changes cannot be answered by the present study alone. Besides the excellent static information in all anatomical structures of the vertebral column available by MRI, a repeat examination in a prone position yields dynamic information on the spinal cord in the case of suspected dorsal adhesions.
    Notes: Zur Analyse möglicher Unfallfolgen an vertebralen Bewegungssegmenten und insbesondere der Bandscheiben nach instabilen, mittels Fixateur interne versorgten thorakolumbalen Wirbelfrakturen führten wir bei 33 Patienten eine Magnetresonanztomographie (MRT) der Verletzungsregion nach der Implantatentfernung durch. Bei der Bandscheibendegeneration nach instabilen thorakolumbalen Wirbelfrakturen sind strukturelle von biochemischen Veränderungen zu unterscheiden. Die mittels MRT bestimmbare biochemische Degeneration findet sich deutlich seltener als ein morphologischer Schaden des Nucleus pulposus. Verletzungen des Anulus fibrosus, der eigentlich stabilisierenden Struktur der vertebralen Bewegungssegmente, wurden bei keinem Patienten beobachtet. Im Vergleich zur frakturbenachbarten oberen Bandscheibe ist der untere Diskus nach Ausheilung der Fraktur zwar weniger von Veränderungen der Form, jedoch häufiger von biochemischer Abnutzung und etwa gleich stark von Höhenverlust betroffen. Die Befürworter einer Resektion der oberen Bandscheibe bei der operativen Behandlung thorakolumbaler Wirbelfrakturen begründen ihr Procedere u. a. mit dem strukturellen Bandscheibenschaden, wie z. B. Höhenverlust und Impaktierung von Bandscheibengewebe in den Wirbelkörper, die in der Summe häufiger bei dem frakturbenachbarten oberen Diskus beobachtet werden. Unsere Beobachtungen, wonach eine Bandscheibe trotz morphologischer Schädigung des Gallertkerns einen dennoch biochemisch intakten Nucleus pulposus und strukturell unversehrten Anulus fibrosus aufweisen kann, sprechen eher für den Erhalt des betreffenden Diskus. Für die frakturbenachbarte obere Zwischenwirbelscheibe (seltener biochemisch degeneriert) bedeutet dies, daß die weitverbreitete Ansicht von der regelmäßigen Zerstörung und demzufolge obligaten Resektion zu überdenken ist. Die Frage, ob die untere Bandscheibe bei nachgewiesenermaßen ausgeprägter biochemischer Degeneration entsprechend häufiger reseziert werden sollte, kann durch die vorliegende Studie allein nicht beantwortet werden. Neben der statischen Beurteilbarkeit sämtlicher anatomischer Strukturen der Wirbelsäule in der MRT liefert die Wiederholung der Untersuchung in Bauchlage eine dynamische Information über das Verhalten des Rückenmarkes bei Verdacht auf dorsale Adhäsion.
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  • 15
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Der Nervenarzt 68 (1997), S. 792-800 
    ISSN: 1433-0407
    Keywords: Schlüsselwörter Okuläre Myositis ; Orbitale Myositis ; Vergrößerung ; Extraokulärer Augenmuskeln ; Orbitale Kernspintomographie ; Orbitale Computertomographie ; Key words Ocular myositis ; Orbital myositis ; Enlarged extraocular muscles ; Magnetic resonance imaging ; Computed tomography
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Description / Table of Contents: Summary We report a young woman presenting with „painful diplopia” caused by inflammation of external eye muscles affecting both eyes sequentially. Orbital MRI disclosed swelling, signal hyperintensity and enhancement of isolated eye muscles. Corticosteroid treatment led to a complete remission within a few days. The compiled data of a literature review enclosing 52 sufficiently documented patients diagnosed as orbital myositis is reported with respect to clinical features, laboratory findings, associated disease, value of imaging procedures (CT, MRI). Therapeutic aspects and differential diagnosis are reviewed.
    Notes: Zusammenfassung Eine junge Patientin mit subakuter schmerzhafter Diplopie als Folge von entzündlichen Veränderungen der äußeren Augenmuskeln, die sequentiell beide Augen betrafen, wird vorgestellt. Das orbitale Kernspintomogramm zeigte eine Schwellung, Signalhyperintensität und Kontrastmittelanreicherung einzelner Augenmuskeln. Die Behandlung mit Kortikosteroiden führte zu einer vollständigen Remission der Symptomatik innerhalb weniger Tage. Aufgrund der Daten von insgesamt 52 gut dokumentierten Patienten mit okulärer Myositis aus der Literatur stellen bewegungsabhängige retrobulbäre Schmerzen (94%) mit Diplopie (85%) die Kernsymptome des Krankheitsbildes dar. Ein weiterer klinischer Hauptbefund ist die konjunktivale Injektion (73%), meistens an der Insertionsstelle des betroffenen Muskels. Die exophthalmische Form mit zusätzlichem Lidödem, Ptose, Chemose und Exophthalmus tritt seltener auf (24%), eine Visusabnahme ist die Ausnahme. Ein beidseitiger Augenmuskelbefall, typischerweise sequentiell, wird in 40% beobachtet. Frauen sind häufiger betroffen (73%), das mittlere Erkrankungsalter liegt bei 34 Jahren. Der M. rectus medialis ist der am häufigsten betroffene Muskel (70%). Die Diagnosesicherung gelingt heute mit der Kernspintomographie auch in leichteren Fällen. Der durch die Entzündung erhöhte Wassergehalt der befallenen Muskeln erklärt die gegenüber der Computertomographie erhöhte Sensitivität der Kernspintomographie. Therapie der Wahl ist die Behandlung mit Kortikosteroiden, hierunter kommt es in 90% innerhalb von Tagen zur Abheilung. Bei zu kurzer Therapiedauer sind Rezidive häufig. Bei Therapieresistenz ist die niedrigdosierte Bestrahlung meist effizient.
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  • 16
    ISSN: 1433-2981
    Keywords: Peripheral blood ; Progenitor cells ; Rat ; Stem cells
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract The assay system for determination of haemopoietic progenitors in peripheral blood of rats is essen tial for potential studies on mobilisation and transplantation of circulating progenitor cells in a rat experimental model. This paper demonstrates the possibility of detection and quantification of pluripotent progenitors (Colony Forming Units-Spleen day 8-CFU-Sd8) and committed progenitors (Colony Forming Units Granulocyte Macrophage-CFU-GM and Burst Forming Units-Erythroid-BFU-E) in peripheral blood of rats in a steady state. For determination of CFU-Sd8 the ‘rat to mouse’ in vivo assay was used, and for committed progenitors in vitro assays on methylcellulose were employed. The CFU-Sd8 incidence ranged from 7.3 to 11.6/ml of rat blood, similar to that reported in literature for mice. The incidence of CFU-GM was found to be 59.7 ± 9.4/ml which is in the range of the literature data for mice, rabbits, dogs and humans. The incidence of BFU-E in rat peripheral blood was 4.3 ± 1/ml, which was relatively low, but could be also considered as comparable with some literature data for dogs and humans. The CFU-E were not detected by the technique used. These results confirmed the existence of circulatory blood pluripotent progenitors (CFU-Sd8) and committed (CFU-GM and BFU-E) progenitors in rat, as has been established for some other mammalian species.
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  • 17
    ISSN: 1432-2161
    Keywords: Key words Gorham syndrome ; Massive osteolysis ; Spine ; Thorax ; Magnetic resonance imaging ; Computed tomography
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract  Gorham syndrome is a rare disorder that is characterized by local osseous invasion and surrounding soft tissues by an angiomatous mass, eventually causing lysis of the affected bone. To date, only four cases have reported the MR imaging appearance of this disease and the findings have been variable. We present a case involving the cervical and thoracic spine and part of the osseous hemithorax with attention to the MR findings.
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  • 18
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    Skeletal radiology 26 (1997), S. 60-63 
    ISSN: 1432-2161
    Keywords: Key words Neurilemmoma (schwannoma) ; Bone neoplasms ; Magnetic resonance imaging ; Magnetic resonance contrast enhancement
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract  We present a case of intraosseous neurilemmoma of the fibula in a 56-year-old woman. This case showed the typical radiographic appearance except for the presence of spotted calcifications that mimicked a cartilaginous tumor. Enhanced MR images revealed the heterogeneity of the tumor, which consisted of Antoni type A and B tissue.
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  • 19
    ISSN: 1432-2161
    Keywords: Key words Bone marrow ; MR studies ; Bone marrow ; Magnetic resonance imaging
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract  Objective. To correlate the MR appearance of the proximal femur marrow with clinical and blood parameters. Design and patients. The proportion of the femoral neck surface area occupied by red marrow was determined on T1-weighted magnetic resonance (MR) images of the hip in a series of 120 subjects, aged from 15 to 75 years, with ten females and ten males per decade, and correlated with clinical data. This parameter and the bulk T1 values of femoral red marrow were determined in 30 other subjects 25–46 years of age and correlated with their blood parameters. Results. In the series of 120 subjects, the proportion of red marrow surface area decreased with age (P〈10–4) and was higher in female than male subjects (P〈10–4). Within each decade, the proportion of red marrow surface area was higher in females than in males between 25 and 65 years but neither before 25 nor after 65 years. In the series of 30 subjects, the proportion of red marrow surface area and bulk T1 values of femoral red marrow were significantly negatively correlated with hemoglobin blood levels but not with blood cell counts. Conclusion. The MR appearance of proximal femur red marrow is influenced by age and sex. A relationship with hemoglobin blood level is demonstrated.
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  • 20
    ISSN: 1432-2161
    Keywords: Key words Fibrolipomatous hamartoma ; Macrodystrophia lipomatosa ; Magnetic resonance imaging ; Peripheral nerve disease ; Lipofibromatous hamartoma ; Median nerve
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract  Objective. To analyze the MR imaging features of fibrolipomatous hamartoma (FLH) of nerves. Design and patients. MR imaging studies from six patients (three men and three women) were retrospectively reviewed by three musculoskeletal radiologists. In four patients, a biopsy of the nerve lesion was performed. In two patients, biopsy data were unavailable and the diagnosis was based on the clinical history combined with the MR imaging findings. Results and conclusion. MR imaging demonstrated fusiform nerve enlargement that was caused by fatty proliferation and thickening of nerve bundles. Nerve bundles appeared as serpentine tubular structures, hypointense on both T1- and T2-weighted images. The degree of fatty proliferation varied among patients. In addition, significant variation in the distribution of fat along the course of the nerves was noted. In three patients, FLH followed the branching pattern of the nerves, a characteristic pathologic finding. In two patients, intramuscular fat deposition (biceps and tibialis posterior muscles) was present. MR imaging findings of FLH are typical, allowing a confident diagnosis. The variation of fatty proliferation among patients and involved nerves as well as the tendency of the abnormalities to follow the branching pattern of the nerves is well demonstrated with MR imaging. FLH may present as an isolated nerve lesion, may be associated with intramuscular fat deposition, or may occur as a feature of macrodystrophia lipomatosa (MDL).
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  • 21
    ISSN: 1434-0879
    Keywords: BBN ; Bladder tumor ; Rat ; Endoscopy
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract Recent advances in tumor carbohydrate biochemistry have demonstrated antitumor effects of locally administered GM3 ganglioside on mouse MBT-2 tumor. When intravesical therapy inN-butyl-N(4-hydroxybu-tyl)nitrosamine (BBN)-induced rat bladder tumor is attempted, it is essential to identify the tumor, to classify its size before therapy and to monitor the effect of the therapy. To establish a more reliable experimental therapeutic system, we assessed the development of BBN-induced rat bladder tumor by endoscopic observation. BBN-induced bladder tumors in rats were observed serially using a 4.2-F flexible fiberscope. The endoscopic findings were compared with the histopathological findings. Intravesical tumor growth varied greatly between individual rats. The smallest change detected by endoscopy was a small edematous lesion histologically proved to be papilloma. The largest nodular lesion was determined to be a papillary, transitional cell carcinoma. This noninvasive method makes the BBN rat experimental system more reliable by allowing confirmation of tumor formation and classification of the tumor volume prior to therapy.
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  • 22
    ISSN: 1434-0879
    Keywords: Renal cell carcinoma ; Renal tubular transport ; Renal cortical slices ; p-Aminohippurate ; Human ; Rat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract In vitro accumulation ofp-aminohippurate (PAH) was investigated in “intact” human renal cortical slices of normal kidney tissue and in tissue slices of renal cell carcinoma (RCC). The technique used was established in preliminary experiments on rat kidney tissue slices. In principle, the accumulation capacity is comparable in renal tissue slices of both species (slice to medium accumulation ratios between 4 and 8). In man sex differences in accumulation capacity do not exist. But, as shown in detail for rats, accumulation capacity drops with age. Tissue slices of RCC are unable to accumulate PAH actively; slice to medium ratio reaches about 1 and indicates passive PAH uptake only. Surprisingly, in tumors of stage pTl PAH uptake is lowest, perhaps as a sign of PAH transport out of the cells. There is no difference between peripheral and central parts of RCC. Age and sex are without influence on PAH uptake in RCC tissue slices. Interestingly, the accumulation capacity of “intact” tissue of kidneys infested with RCC also depends on the severity of the tumor (stage, diameter), but not on grading and formation of metastases.
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  • 23
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    Urological research 25 (1997), S. 173-177 
    ISSN: 1434-0879
    Keywords: αB crystallin ; Heat shock protein ; Rat ; Kidney neoplasms
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract The expression of two small stress proteins, αB crystallin and the 27-kDa heat shock protein (HSP27), was studied quantitatively and immunohistochemically in normal kidney and renal tumors in rats. Levels of αB crystallin in renal cell tumors tended to be higher than in normal kidney (P = 0.07), but with a wide range of values, whereas they were significantly lower in mesenchymal tumors (P 〈 0.0001). In contrast, HSP27 concentrations in both renal cell (mean ± SD: 1790 ± 940 ng/mg protein,n = 15) and mesenchymal (1260 ± 1080 ng/mg protein,n = 10) tumors were significantly higher than the normal kidney value (142 ± 30 ng/mg protein,n = 10,P 〈 0.0001). A positive correlation was found between αB crystallin and HSP27 levels limited to the renal cell tumor case (Pearson's correlation coefficient,r = 0.68,P 〈 0.01). Immunohistochemistry revealed the loops of Henle to be positive for αB crystallin, whereas HSP27 staining was positive in glomerular and interstitial vascular walls and epithelial cells of proximal and distal tubules. Positive immunostaining for αB crystallin was demonstrated in six of nine renal cell tumors (67%) studied and for HSP27 in all of the nine cases (100%).
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  • 24
    ISSN: 0942-0940
    Keywords: Rat ; brain injury ; diffuse injury ; free radicals ; lipid peroxidation
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary Free radicals are generated after head injury. These radicals rapidly react with polyunsaturated fatty acids in the cell membrane and cause membrane destruction. This process is called lipid per-oxidation. Malondialdehyde (MDA) is one of the end products of lipid peroxidation, and it is a frequently used indicator of lipid per-oxidation in biological tissues. Using a diffuse head injury animal model, we studied the time course of lipid peroxidation in different regions of injured rat brains. In the present study, the MDA levels were 36.7%, 41.8%, and 35.1% greater than sham at one hour after injury at the frontal, parietal, and brain stem, respectively (p〈0.0001). The MDA levels in these regions continued to increase and peaked a 4 hours after the injury. The levels slowly decreased, and by 24 hours, they were still significantly higher than the sham control's. The elevation of MDA levels was less in the striatum and the temporal regions at one hour. They were 16.9% and 13.3%, respectively (p〈0.002). The MDA levels in these two regions continued to increase even after 4 hours of injury, but the degree of elevation never exceeded 35%. The results demonstrate that there is an immediate, posttraumatic burst of MDA production, suggesting the formation of free radicals after diffuse head injury. Even though all the regions sampled show the same effect, certain regions are less affected by this diffuse head injury animal model.
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  • 25
    ISSN: 1432-0533
    Keywords: Key words Schwann cell ; Diabetic neuropathy ; Human ; Animal model ; Galactose ; Rat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract Despite early descriptions of hypertrophic Schwann cells and onion-bulb formation in patients with diabetic neuropathy, clinical and experimental studies have emphasized axonal pathology. In recent years, the Schwann cell has been further implicated in diabetic neuropathy because it is the primary intrafascicular location for the first enzyme of the polyol pathway, aldose reductase, which appears to have a role in modulating a variety of complications of diabetes, including diabetic neuropathy. To further explore the role of polyol pathway flux in the pathogenesis of Schwann cell injury, ultrastructural abnormalities of Schwann cells in human diabetic neuropathy (HDN) were compared with those in experimental galactose neuropathy (EGN), a well-characterized model of hyperglycemia without hypoinsulinemia. Similar to previous studies of EGN, reactive, degenerative and proliferative changes of Schwann cells were observed after 2, 4 and 24 months of galactose intoxication. Reactive changes included accumulation of lipid droplets, π granules of Reich and glycogen granules, increased numbers of subplasmalemmal vesicles, cytoplasmic expansion, and capping. Degenerative changes included enlargement of mitochondria and effacement of cristae, and disintegration of both abaxonal and adaxonal cytosol and organelles. Both demyelination and onion-bulb formation were seen at all time points, although supernumerary Schwann cells and axonal degeneration were most numerous after 24 months of galactose feeding. In sural nerve biopsy samples from patients with diabetes and progressive worsening of neuropathy, ultrastructural abnormalities in Schwann cells encompassed the full range of reactive, degenerative and proliferative changes described in galactose-fed rats. The concordance of fine-structural observations in nerves from galactose-fed rats and these adult-onset diabetic patients emphasizes the role of flux through aldose reductase in the complex pathology of diabetic neuropathy and points to the utility of galactose intoxication in helping to understand this metabolic disorder.
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  • 26
    ISSN: 1432-0533
    Keywords: Key words Microwave irradiation ; Mobile telephony ; Blood-brain barrier ; Vasogenic edema ; Rat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract We investigated the effects of global system for mobile communication (GSM) microwave exposure on the permeability of the blood-brain barrier using a calibrated microwave exposure system in the 900 MHz band. Rats were restrained in a carousel of circularly arranged plastic tubes and sham-exposed or microwave irradiated for a duration of 4 h at specific brain absorption rates (SAR) ranging from 0.3 to 7.5 W/kg. The extravasation of proteins was assessed either at the end of exposure or 7 days later in three to five coronal brain slices by immunohistochemical staining of serum albumin. As a positive control two rats were subjected to cold injury. In the brains of freely moving control rats (n = 20) only one spot of extravasated serum albumin could be detected in one animal. In the sham-exposed control group (n = 20) three animals exhibited a total of 4 extravasations. In animals irradiated for 4 h at SAR of 0.3, 1.5 and 7.5 W/kg (n = 20 in each group) five out of the ten animals of each group killed at the end of the exposure showed 7, 6 and 14 extravasations, respectively. In the ten animals of each group killed 7 days after exposure, the total number of extravasations was 2, 0 and 1, respectively. The increase in serum albumin extravasations after microwave exposure reached significance only in the group exposed to the highest SAR of 7.5 W/kg but not at the lower intensities. Histological injury was not observed in any of the examined brains. Compared to other pathological conditions with increased blood-brain barrier permeability such as cold injury, the here observed serum albumin extravasations are very modest and, moreover, reversible. Microwave exposure in the frequency and intensity range of mobile telephony is unlikely to produce pathologically significant changes of the blood-brain barrier permeability.
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  • 27
    ISSN: 1432-0533
    Keywords: Key words Traumatic brain injury ; Hypothermia ; Fluid percussion ; Rat ; Contusion
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract Early outcome measures of experimental traumatic brain injury (TBI) are useful for characterizing the traumatic severity as well as for clarifying the pathomechanisms underlying patterns of neuronal vulnerability. However, it is increasingly apparent that acute outcome measures may not always be accurate predictors of chronic outcome, particularly when assessing the efficacy of potential therapeutic regimens. This study examined the chronic histopathological outcome in rats 8 weeks following fluid-percussive TBI coupled with moderate post-traumatic brain hypothermia, a protocol that provides acute neuronal protection. Animals received a moderate parasagittal percussive head injury (2.01–2.38 atm) or sham procedure followed immediately by 3 h of brain hypothermia (30°C) or normothermia (37°C). Eight weeks following TBI, serial tissue sections were stained with hematoxylin and eosin or immunostained for glial fibrillary acidic protein. Tissue damage, gliosis and immunoreactive astrocytes were observed in the ipsilateral thalamus, hippocampus, and in the neocortex lateral to the injury site. Within the thalamus, focal necrosis was restricted to selective thalamic nuclei. Significant hippocampal cell loss was found in the ipsilateral dentate hilar region of both TBI groups. Quantitative volume measurements revealed significant decreases in cortical, thalamic and hippocampal volume ipsilateral to the impact in both TBI groups. Lateral ventricles were substantially enlarged in the TBI-normothermia group, an effect which was significantly attenuated by post-TBI hypothermia. The attenuation of lateral ventricular dilation by post-traumatic hypothermia is indicative of chronic neuroprotection in this TBI model. These data provide new information concerning the chronic histopathological consequence of experimental TBI and the relevance of this trauma model to chronic human head injury.
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  • 28
    ISSN: 1432-0533
    Keywords: Key words Intercellular adhesion molecule 1 ; Immunohistochemistry ; Rat ; Brain ; Trauma
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract A study was made on the expression of the intercellular adhesion molecule 1 (ICAM-1) in cerebral microvessels after cortical contusion trauma of the rat brain. The trauma was produced by a free-falling weight on the exposed dura of one fronto-parietal lobe. Immunohistochemistry was done on cryostat sections using a monoclonal antibody and the reaction product was visualized using the avidin-biotin-peroxidase complex method. Control and sham-operated rats showed immunostaining of some penetrating arteries of the cerebral cortex, the epithelial cells of the choroid plexus and occasional microvessels of the brain parenchyma. The same pattern of immunostaining was seen in rats that were subjected to trauma and killed after 30 min. All rats with contusion trauma that were allowed to survive for 6–72 h showed a substantial increase in the number of immunostained capillaries throughout the site of the lesion. The ipsilateral hippocampus showed a mild to moderate increase in the number of immunostained microvascular profiles. This phenomenon was also present in the lateral thalamus of some rats. The staining was seen as an uninterrupted line at the position of the endothelial cells, indicating an up-regulation of this adhesion molecule after brain trauma. Up-regulation of ICAM-1 is a well-known phenomenon in inflammatory and ischemic lesions of the brain but has not previously been described in detail in traumatic brain injury. ICAM-1 may be involved in the production of several post-traumatic events such as leukocyte adhesion, microcirculatory disturbances and edema formation.
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  • 29
    ISSN: 1432-0533
    Keywords: Key words Parkinson’s disease ; Neural transplantation ; Allogeneic ; Major histocompatibility complex antigens ; Rat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract Neural transplantation, as a therapeutic approach to Parkinson’s disease, still requires allogeneic graft material and raises questions of immunosuppression and graft rejection. The present study investigated the time course of major histocompatibility complex (MHC) expression and astrocytic response in allogeneic dopaminergic grafts, comparing two different grafting protocols. Adult 6-hydroxydopamine-lesioned Lewis 1.W rats received intrastriatal cell suspension grafts from the ventral mesencephalon of DA rat fetuses, either as single 1-μl macrograft via metal cannula or as four micrografts of 250 nl/deposit via a glass capillary. No immunosuppression was administered. Immunohistochemistry was performed at 1, 3, 6, and 12 weeks after grafting, using antibodies against donor- and host-specific MHC class I and II antigen, glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP) and tyrosine hydroxylase (TH). Most animals showed good allograft survival up to 12 weeks after transplantation with no signs of rejection. Reinnervation of the lesioned striatum by TH-positive neurites was observed from 3–6 weeks on. Expression of donor-specific MHC class I was comparably low in both allogeneic grafting groups, while host MHC class I and II reaction as well as astrocytic response tended to be higher in the macrografted animals. Donor MHC class II was not observed at any time point. It is concluded that intraparenchymal allografts of fetal mesencephalic cell suspensions can survive well in the rat Parkinson model without immunosuppression for at least 12 weeks, and that the expression of moderate amounts of donor-specific MHC class I antigen does not suffice to initiate a rejection process. In addition, the microtransplantation approach may reduce the level of trauma and subsequent MHC and GFAP expression and may, thereby, minimize the risk of graft rejection.
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  • 30
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    Anatomy and embryology 196 (1997), S. 417-426 
    ISSN: 1432-0568
    Keywords: Key words Neuronal plasticity ; Fiber growth ; Regeneration ; Rat ; CNS myelin
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract  After lesions in the central nervous system (CNS), the affected nerve fibers usually cannot regenerate and reconnect to their original target cells. One important reason for this failure to regenerate is the presence of neurite growth inhibitory molecules in the myelin sheath of central nerve fibers. Despite the absence of regeneration fiber growth can occur after CNS lesions from intact nerve fibers unaffected by the lesion. These fibers can form new collaterals and sprout into the region denervated by the lesion, thereby increasing their terminal arbors in a process called collateral sprouting. A certain functional compensation for the nerve fibers lost by the lesion can be achieved by this mechanism. In the spinal cord, collateral sprouting is extensive after lesions in young postnatal animals and decreases with increasing age. In the spinal cord of adult animals, axon sprouting can be observed but is strongly restricted. The factors that determine the amount of sprouting found after lesions at different ages are still largely unknown. Recent evidence suggests that the myelin-associated neurite growth inhibitors that suppress regeneration also restrict collateral sprouting in the spinal cord. In addition, the expression of growth-associated molecules, in particular the growth-associated protein GAP-43, by the sprouting nerve fibers appears to be an important determinant of the sprouting response. The robustness of the sprouting response is thus likely to be controlled by intrinsic growth determinants of the sprouting neuron as well as by the growth promoting and growth inhibitory properties of the microenvironment of the sprouting fibers.
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  • 31
    ISSN: 1279-8517
    Keywords: Ocular development ; Orbit ; Fetus ; Eye ; Magnetic resonance imaging ; Anatomy
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Description / Table of Contents: Résumé Le but de cette étude est de mesurer la croissance oculaire fœtale et de déterminer une courbe à l'aide de mesuresin utero. La croissance oculaire fœtale a été établie par l'analyse des images obtenues en imagerie par résonance magnétique (IRM). L'étude anatomique a permis de définir les meilleures séquences contrastées en IRM pour calculer la surface oculaire. L'analyse biométrique des valeurs de la surface oculaire dans le plan neuro-oculaire de 35 fœtus nous a permis d'établir une modélisation linéaire de la courbe de croissance oculaire in utero. L'évaluation de la croissance oculaire peut permettre de déceler et de confirmer des anomalies malformatives oculaires comme les microphtalmies.
    Notes: Summary The aim of this study was to measure fetal ocular development and to determine a growth curve by means of measurementsin utero. Fetal ocular development was recorded by analysis of the results of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). An anatomic study allowed definition of the best contrasted MRI sequences for calculation of the ocular surface. Biometric analysis of the values of the ocular surface in the neuro-ocular plane in 35 fetuses allowed establishment of a linear model of ocular growth curvein utero. Evaluation of ocular development may allow the detection and confirmation of malformational ocular anomalies such as microphthalmia.
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  • 32
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    Acta neurochirurgica 139 (1997), S. 478-479 
    ISSN: 0942-0940
    Keywords: Magnetic resonance imaging ; cerebral infarction ; neoplastic angioendotheliosis
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
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  • 33
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    Acta neurochirurgica 139 (1997), S. 613-618 
    ISSN: 0942-0940
    Keywords: Magnetic resonance imaging ; monoclonal antibody ; pituitary adenoma ; proliferative potential ; regrowth
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary The proliferative potential of 45 pituitary adenomas was compared with their biological behaviour as determined by immunohistochemical studies, radiological findings, and clinical manifestations. The PCI (proliferating cell index) as measured using antibody MIB-1 in this study ranged from 0.05 to 4.80%, with an average PCI of 1.49±0.19% (mean±standard error of the mean). There was no significant correlation between proliferation and hormonal state, maximum size, intra-adenomatous haemorrhage, or invasiveness. However, a PCI ≧ 1.5% appeared to correlate with the likelihood of tumour regrowth (regrowth rate: 50%); for PCIs 〈 1.5%, the rate was 16%. Regrowth adenomas had a higher mean MIB-1 PCI than non-regrowth adenomas [2.34±0.58% (SE) versus 1.14±0.16%, p ≦ 0.05]. MIB-1 PCIs may provide information that is useful for planning follow-up studies and treatment after surgical resection.
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  • 34
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    European journal of pediatrics 156 (1997), S. 367-370 
    ISSN: 1432-1076
    Keywords: Key words Childhood leukaemia treatment long-term side-effects  ;  Cerebral haemorrhage  ;  Cavernous angioma  ;  Central nervous capillary telangiectases  ; Magnetic resonance imaging
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract Modern treatment of childhood acute lymphoblastic leukaemia (ALL) has dramatically improved the prognosis for children with this disease. Therapeutic approaches consist of multimodal chemotherapy and radiotherapy with significant long-term side-effects. We report on 4 children out of a group of 120 newly diagnosed patients with ALL, who survived the disease for more than 2 years and developed a cerebral haemorrhage after chemotherapy and fractionated cranial irradiation. Following a period of 2–12 years the four children presented with acute neurological signs and symptoms, i.e. seizures, ataxia and hemiparesis. CT and MRI revealed intracerebral mass lesions, interpreted as haemorrhage. After neurosurgery the patients neurological state improved. Histological examination confirmed the suspected diagnosis of bleeding cavernous haemangioma or capillary telangiectases. There are two possibilities to explain these rare alterations: they may be pre-existent to the disease and therapy or they may be caused by irradiation. Conclusion Acute neurological symptoms in patients treated for ALL may be caused by spontaneous cerebral haemorrhaging of cavernous haemangiomas or capillary telangiectases induced by chemotherapy and/or radiotherapy.
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  • 35
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    Intensive care medicine 23 (1997), S. 702-703 
    ISSN: 1432-1238
    Keywords: Key words Vena cava ; Systemic venous return ; Congenital heart disease ; Magnetic resonance imaging
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract We describe a case of left-sided superior vena cava. The diagnosis was suggested by chest radiograph after central venous catheter placement. This was subsequently confirmed by magnetic resonance imaging.
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  • 36
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    European radiology 7 (1997), S. 1028-1030 
    ISSN: 1432-1084
    Keywords: Key words: Spinal cord compression ; Spine ; neoplasms ; Osteochondroma ; Chondrosarcoma ; Computed tomography ; Magnetic resonance imaging
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract. Various neoplastic, vascular, and developmental causes may lead to spinal neural foraminal widening, the most common causes of spinal dumbbell lesions being schwannomas and neurofibromas. Occasionally, some other slow-growing tumors may cause neural foraminal widening. We report an exceptional case of a low-grade spinal chondrosarcoma which apparently developed from a pre-existing osteochondroma in the neural arcus of C6. The lesion passed through the C5–C6 foramen, producing a dumbbell mass.
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  • 37
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    European radiology 7 (1997), S. S289 
    ISSN: 1432-1084
    Keywords: Key words: Breast neoplasms ; Magnetic resonance imaging ; Gadolinium/diagnostic use ; Contrast media ; Organometallic compounds/diagnostic use
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) of the breast brings the advantages of high resolution cross-sectional imaging to breast cancer diagnosis, treatment and research: improved cancer detection, staging, selection of therapy, evaluation of therapeutic response in vivo, detection of recurrence, and even the development of new therapies. Until now breast cancer treatment and research has been impeded by the limited means of evaluating the breast cancer in vivo: primarily clinical palpation and mammography of the breast tumor. A review of the initial studies shows that with the use of paramagnetic contrast agents, MRI has a sensitivity of 96 % for detecting breast cancers. MRI detects multicentric disease with a sensitivity of 98 %, superior to any other modality. The ability of MRI to detect recurrent local breast cancer in the conservatively treated breast is nearly 100 %. MRI is capable of monitoring tumor response to chemotherapy and actually guiding therapeutic interventions such as interstitial laser photocoagulation.
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  • 38
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Transplant ; Striatum ; Substantia nigra ; Patch-matrix ; Regeneration ; Rat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract When patients with Parkinson’s disease initially show symptoms, approximately 80–85% of their dopaminergic nerve fibers in the striatum have degenerated. It is thus of importance to develop strategies to try to rescue the remaining dopaminergic neurons and to stimulate them to induce sprouting. In this study the goal was to examine whether the different subgroups of dopaminergic neurons in the ventral mesencephalon projecting to the basal ganglia have different sprouting capacities when stimulated by the trophic effect of a fetal striatal graft. Lateral ganglionic eminence was implanted into the lateral ventricle, the midportion of dorsal striatum, globus pallidus, or ventral striatum. Solid tissue pieces from 13- to 15-mm fetuses were stereotactically implanted into adult female Sprague-Dawley rats. At postgrafting week 4 the animals were perfused and processed for tyrosine hydroxylase (TH) immunohistochemistry. Transplants placed in the lateral ventricle were TH-negative, except for two cases with TH-positive fibers where the ependymal layer was disrupted, thereby allowing direct contact between the graft and the adjacent host striatum. The transplants placed into dorsal striatum were innervated by small patches of dopaminergic nerve fibers. Areas between the TH-positive patchy structures remained TH-negative. In grafts placed into globus pallidus, both patchy structures and a less dense TH-positive nerve fiber network was noted. The TH-positive growth pattern in transplants placed in ventral striatum was also devided into patchy and widespread growth. Grafts placed in globus pallidus and ventral striatum revealed significantly larger areas of TH-positive innervation compared with that measured in grafts placed in dorsal striatum and the lateral ventricle. In conclusion, it is possible to induce sprouting of TH-immunoreactive nerve fibers from all areas examined. The most potent areas to initiate dopaminergic growth were the globus pallidus and ventral striatum, where both a patchy dense and a widespread, less dense growth was induced. Thus, if using a trophic stimulus to induce sprouting from remaining dopaminergic nerve fibers in Parkinson’s disease, the preferential target to induce sprouting would be ventromedial striatum and growth would be guided toward dorsal striatum owing to the enhanced dopaminergic growth properties in the ventromedial areas.
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  • 39
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: GABA ; Double immunostaining ; Retrograde tracing ; Diagonal band ; Disinhibition ; Rat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract In the septal complex, both parvalbumin and calbindin neurons cocontain GABA. In the same area, a large number of GABA-GABA synaptic connections can be observed. In order to further characterize their neurochemical nature, as well as the extrinsic and/or intrinsic origin of these GABA terminals, the following experiments were performed: (1) correlated light- and electronmicroscopic double immunostaining for calbindin and parvalbumin on septal sections of control rats; (2) light microscopic parvalbumin immunostaining of septal sections after surgical isolation (5 days) of the septum from its telencephalic or (3) hypothalamic afferents; and (4) parvalbumin immunostaining of sections prepared from the entire brain 2 days following horseradish peroxidase injection into the border between the lateral and medial septum. The results demonstrated that: (1) in a well-circumscribed, vertically longitudinal area located between the lateral and medial septum, 0.1–0.6 mm anterior to the bregma, a group of calbindin-containing, nonsomatospiny neurons are surrounded by parvalbumin-immunoreactive baskets; (2) these basket-forming axon terminals establish symmetric synaptic contacts with their targets; and (3) their cells of origin are not in the medial septum, but in the angular porition of the vertical limb. These observations indicate that a portion of the septal complex GABA-GABA synaptic connections represent functional interaction between two different types of GABAergic neurons. The presynaptic GABAergic neurons contain parvalbumin, and the postsynaptic GABAergic cells are immunoreactive for calbindin. Furthermore, a population of the medial septum/diagonal band parvalbumin neurons promect only to the hippocampus, while others, which may also send axons to the hippocampus, terminate on lateral septum calbindin cells as well.
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  • 40
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    Experimental brain research 113 (1997), S. 303-310 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Hippocampus ; Adenosine A1 receptor ; DPCPX ; Purines ; Membrane partitioning ; Rat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract Despite its potent proconvulsant effects in vitro, the adenosine A1 receptor antagonist 1,3-dipropyl-8-cyclopentylxanthine (DPCPX) does not induce seizures when administered in vivo. This contrasts with the effects of less selective adenosine antagonists such as theophylline or cyclopentlytheophylline, and led us to reexamine the nature of DPCPX-induced epileptiform activity. In the present study, we report that proconvulsant effects of bath-applied DPCPX in rat hippocampal slices are only observed after a preceding stimulus such as NMDA receptor activation or brief tetanic stimulation. While this may be due to the absence of a basal “purinergic tone”, the relatively high interstitial concentrations of adenosine present in the slice suggest that access of the drug to A1 receptors may instead be prevented by tightly coupled endogenous adenosine, with the ternary adenosine-A1 receptor-G protein complex stabilised in the high-affinity conformation by a coupling cofactor. This implies that a substantial percentage of adenosine A1 receptors are inactive under physiological conditions, but that access of adenosine A1 receptor antagonists may be facilitated under pathological conditions. Once induced, DPCPX-evoked spiking persists for long periods of time. A “kindling” effect of A1 receptor blockade is unlikely, since persistent spiking is not usually observed with less selective A1 antagonists even after prolonged application. Alternatively, endogenous adenosine released during increased neuronal activity may activate A2 receptors during selective A1 blockade. The most important factor determining the duration of DPCPX-induced spiking, however, may be a persistence of the drug in the tissue and subsequent access to the A1 receptor via a membrane-delineated pathway, since DPCPX-induced spiking could be shown to decrease markedly after a transient superfusion of theophylline. This hypothesis, which implies that the apparent affinity of adenosine antagonists for the A1 receptor is in part a function of their membrane partitioning coefficient, is supported by a close correlation between alkylxanthine logP values obtained from the literature and theirK i value at A1 receptors, but not at the enzyme phosphodiesterase, whose xanthine binding site is presented to the cytosol. The implications for the therapeutic value of purinergic drugs are discussed.
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  • 41
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    Experimental brain research 113 (1997), S. 343-352 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Memory ; Glutamate receptors ; GABA receptors ; Modulatory sites of NMDA receptors ; Rat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract Effects of redox reagents on excitatory and inhibitory synaptic responses as well as on the bidirectional plasticity of α-amino-3-hydroxy-5-methylisoxazole-propionic acid (AMPA) andN-methyl-d-aspartate (NMDA) receptor-mediated synaptic responses were studied in CA1 pyramidal neurons in rat hippocampal slices. The oxidizing agent 5,5′-dithiobis(2-nitrobenzoic acid) (DTNB, 200 μM) did not affect AMPA, GABAA or GABAB receptor-mediated synaptic responses or the activation of presynaptic metabotropic receptors. However, DTNB irreversibly decreased (by approximately 50%) currents evoked by focal application of NMDA. DTNB also decreased the NMDA component of the EPSC. The reversal potential of NMDA currents and the Mg2+ block were not modified. In the presence of physiological concentrations of Mg2+ (1.3 mM), DTNB did not affect the NMDA receptor-dependent induction of long-term potentiation (LTP) or long-term depression (LTD) expressed by AMPA receptors. In contrast, DTNB fully prevented LTP and LTD induced and expressed by NMDA receptors. Plasticity of NMDA receptor-mediated synaptic responses could be reinstated by the reducing agenttris-(2-carboxyethyl) phosphine (TCEP, 200 μM). These results suggest that persistent, bidirectional changes in synaptic currents mediated by NMDA receptors cannot be evoked when these receptors are in an oxidized state, whereas NMDA-dependent LTP and LTD are still expressed by AMPA receptors. Our observations raise the possibility of developing therapeutic agents that would prevent persistent excitotoxic enhancement of NMDA receptor-mediated events without blocking long-term modifications of AMPA receptor-mediated synaptic responses, thought to underlie memory processes.
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  • 42
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Key words Perinatal asphyxia ; Apoptosis ; Necrosis ; Hematoxylin-eosin ; DNA fragmentation ; Rat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract  The consequences of perinatal asphyxia on the rat brain were studied 80 min to 8 days after birth with hematoxylin-eosin and in situ DNA double-strand-breaks labeling histochemistry. Asphyxia was induced by immersing fetus-containing uterus horns, removed from ready-to-deliver Sprague-Dawley rats, in a water bath at 37°C for various time periods (0–22 min). Spontaneous- and cesarean-delivered pups were used as controls. Perinatal asphyxia led to a decrease in the rate of survival, depending upon the length of the insult. No gross morphological changes could be seen in the brain of either control or asphyctic pups at any of the studied time points after delivery. However, in all groups, nuclear chromatin fragmentation, corresponding to in situ detection of DNA fragmentation, was observed at different stages. Nuclear fragmentation in control pups showed a specific distribution that appeared to be related to brain maturation, thus indicating programmed cell death. A progressive and delayed increase in nuclear fragmentation was found in asphyctic pups, which was dependent upon the length of the perinatal insult. The most evident effect was seen in frontal cortex, striatum, and cerebellum at postnatal day 8, although changes were also found in ventral-posterior thalamus, at days 1 and 2. Thus, nuclear chromatin fragmentation in asphyctic pups indicates a delayed post-asphyctic neuronal death. The absence of signs of inflammation or necrosis suggests that delayed neuronal cell death following perinatal asphyxia is an active, apoptosis-like phenomenon.
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  • 43
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Key words Entorhinal cortex ; Subiculum ; Retrohippocampus ; Latent inhibition ; Partial reinforcement extinction effect ; Rat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract  Experiment 1 assessed the effect of cytotoxic retrohippocampal (entorhinal and extra-subicular cortices) lesions on the development of latent inhibition (LI) using an off-the-baseline, between-subjects, conditioned emotional response paradigm. Sham-operated controls and unoperated rats that had been pre-exposed to a light stimulus prior to light-shock pairings showed less conditioned suppression towards the light stimulus than the nonpre-exposed animals, thus demonstrating LI. However, LI was not evident in rats with retrohippocampal lesions. In experiment 2, the same animals were trained to run in an straight runway for food. Half of the animals were trained under a 50% partial reinforcement schedule (i.e. they were rewarded randomly on half of the acquisition trials) and the other half were trained under a continuous reinforcement schedule (i.e. they were rewarded on every acquisition trial). When tested in extinction, animals trained on the partial reinforcement schedule showed greater persistence than animals trained on continuous reinforcement, thus demonstrating the partial reinforcement extinction effect (PREE). Rats with retrohippocampal lesions showed a PREE that was at least as clear as that seen in the sham-operated controls and in the unoperated animals. It is concluded that cytotoxic lesions of the retrohippocampal region selectively led to an abolition of LI, but spared the PREE. The present study thus provided evidence against the hypothesis that LI and the PREE share a common neural substrate.
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  • 44
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Key words Species differences ; CA2 ; Retrograde tracing ; Colocalization ; Theta rhythm ; Rat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract  Our recent studies showed the co-existence of substance P and calretinin in the supramammillo-hippocampal pathway of monkeys, as well as species differences in the synaptic targets of extrinsic substance P fibers in the hippocampi of monkeys and rats. Experiments used: (1) single and multiple stereotaxic injection of wheat germ agglutinin-conjugated HRP into the hippocampus and immunostaining for substance P in the supramammillary area; (2) colocalization of substance P and calretinin in supramammillary area cells; and (3) colocalization of these two neurochemicals in retrogradely labeled supramammillary projective cells of both male and female rats. These demonstrated: (a) many calretinin- and fewer substance P-immunoreactive neurons retrogradely labeled in the ipsilateral supramammillary area; (b) approximately 74% of all substance P cells contain calretinin and 9% of the calretinin neurons co-contain substance P; and, most importantly (c) none of the retrogradely labeled supramammillary cells colocalize calretinin and substance P. These results indicate the presence of two distinct supramammillo-hippocampal projections in the rat, one that contains substance P and the other calretinin. The latter innervates the same areas as those in the monkey, and the former terminates only in the CA2 hippocampal subfield.
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  • 45
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    Experimental brain research 115 (1997), S. 129-136 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Key words Fos-like immunoreactivity ; Middle cerebral artery ; Focal cerebral ischaemia ; Spinal cord neurons ; Rat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract  This study examined c-fos protein expression in the brain and spinal cord of rats following permanent occlusion of the middle cerebral artery (MCA) above the rhinal fissure. At 1 h after right-sided MCA occlusion, Fos-like immunoreactivity (Fos-LI) was detected in neurons not only in the ipsilateral cerebral cortex but also in the spinal cord. In the latter, Fos-LI was localized in the nucleus and perikarya of neurons in the grey matter, notably the large motor neurons in the ventral horn. Fos-LI was most intense at 2–4 h, but became undetectable after 48 h in the cerebral cortex and 72 h in the spinal cord. In sham-operated animals, Fos-LI was almost undetectable or virtually absent. It was also not detected in the core territory supplied by the MCA at any time points after arterial occlusion. When the ischaemia-induced neuronal damage in both the cerebral cortex and spinal cord was evaluated by Nissl staining, some neurons appeared atrophic. We conclude that the induction of Fos-LI in neurons of the cerebral cortex and spinal cord is linked respectively to early onset–short stimulation and persistent excitatory or disinhibition phenomenon as a result of focal ischaemic brain injury.
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  • 46
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    European radiology 7 (1997), S. 1245-1251 
    ISSN: 1432-1084
    Keywords: Key words: Knee ; Magnetic resonance imaging ; Children ; Trauma
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract. The appearances of knee injuries on MR imaging are less well documented in children than adults. Some patterns of injury are shared by both groups of patients, e. g. meniscal damage. The frequency of specific injuries may differ, e. g. anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) tear. Congenital abnormality, coexistent pathology and previous treatment of the knee appear to be associated with meniscal problems. Discoid menisci are seen most frequently in children and have unique features on MR scans. Cruciate ligament tears are difficult to diagnose in the smallest children. The ACL may not be identified due to its small size. Normal bone marrow signal may be confused with marrow infiltration or bone microfracture. Radiographically occult fractures around the knee appear to be strongly associated with ligamentous injury as in adult patients. Osteochondral fractures, osteochondral lesions and articular cartilage damage are revealed on MR scans, but their long-term effects are uncertain. It is possible to diagnose a range of knee injuries on MR scans in children. The biggest diagnostic challenge is in pre-school children.
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  • 47
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    Experimental brain research 113 (1997), S. 138-143 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Parkinson’s disease ; Neural transplantation ; Cell death ; Lazaroid ; Dopamine ; Free radicals ; Rat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract We explored the effects of congeners of nitrogen monoxide (NO) on cultured mesencephalic neurons. Sodium nitroprusside (SNP) was used as a donor of NO, the congeners of which have been found to exert either neurotoxic or neuroprotive effects depending on the surrounding redox milieu. In contrast to a previous report that suggests that the nitrosonium ion (NO+) is neuroprotective to cultured cortical neurons, we found that the nitrosonium ion reduces the survival of cultured dopamine neurons to 32% of control. There was a trend for further impairment of dopamine neuron survival, to only 7% of untreated control, when the cultures were treated with SNP plus ascorbate, i.e. when the nitric oxide radical (NO) had presumably been formed. We also evaluated the effects of an inhibitor of lipid peroxidation, the lazaroid U-83836E, against SNP toxicity. U-83836E exerted marked neuroprotective effects in both insult models. More than twice as many dopamine neurons (75% of control) survival when the lazaroid was added to SNP-treated cultures and the survival was increased eight-fold (to 55% of control) when U-83836E was added to cultures treated with SNP plus ascorbate. We conclude that the congeners of NO released by SNP are toxic to mesencephalic neurons in vitro and that the lazaroid U-83836E significantly increases the survival of dopamine neurons in situations where congeners of NO are generated.
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  • 48
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Antidiuretic hormone ; Osmotic stimulus ; Anteroventral third ventricular region ; Prostaglandins ; Meclofenamate ; Rat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract This study explored the roles of prostaglandins in the anteroventral third ventricular region, a cerebral osmoreceptor site, in the osmoregulation mechanism of vasopressin release. We injected (1 μl) prostaglandin E2 (12.8 nmol) or meclofenamate (78.3 nmol), an inhibitor of prostaglandin biosynthesis, into the brain region or the lateral cerebral ventricle of conscious rats, examining their effects on plasma vasopressin and its controlling factors in the presence or absence of an osmotic stimulus. The injection of prostaglandin E2 into the anteroventral third ventricular region augmented plasma vasopressin and arterial pressure after 5 min and 15 min, without influencing plasma osmolality, sodium, potassium, or chloride. In contrast, intraventricular injection of prostaglandin E2 did not cause any significant effect on those variables. The i.v. infusion (0.1 ml·kg−1·min−1) of hypertonic saline (2.5 mol/l) enhanced plasma vasopressin after 15 min and 30 min; this was accompanied by increased plasma osmolality, sodium, and chloride, and by unaltered or elevated arterial pressure. Meclofenamate given into the anteroventral third ventricular region 30 min before starting the hypertonic saline infusion abolished the osmotic vasopressin response without significantly changing the responses of the other variables. Histological analysis showed that the injection sites of meclofenamate in these rats were close to those of prostaglandin E2 in the anteroventral third ventricular region and included the organum vasculosum of the lamina terminalis and the surrounding area, the medial preoptic area, and periventricular and median preoptic nuclei. When injection cannulae for meclofenamate deviated from those areas incidentally or when the drug was expressly administered into the cerebral ventricle, the osmotic vasopressin response was not inhibited. Plasma vasopressin and the other variables observed during the i.v. infusion of isotonic saline (0.15 mol/l) were not affected significantly by meclofenamate administration into the anteroventral third ventricular region or the cerebral ventricle. On the basis of these results, we concluded that prostaglandins synthesized in and/or near the anteroventral third ventricular region might contribute to the facilitation of vasopressin release in the hyperosmotic state.
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  • 49
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    Experimental brain research 114 (1997), S. 51-62 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Key words Pupillary light reflex ; Pretectum ; Anterograde and retrograde tracing ; GABA immunohistochemistry ; Rat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract  The olivary pretectal nucleus is a primary visual centre, involved in the pupillary light reflex. In the present study an ultrastructural analysis was made of the olivary pretectal nucleus by means of separate, anterograde and retrograde tracing techniques and immunohistochemistry of gamma-aminobutyric acid. Large-projection neurons and two types of gamma-aminobutyric acid-immunoreactive (GABA-ir) neurons are observed in the olivary pretectal nucleus. The primary dendrites of the projection neurons have a dichotomous appearance, the secondary dendrites a multipolar appearance. At the ultrastructural level the projection neurons have well-developed Golgi fields, abundant rough endoplasmic reticulum and the nucleus is always heavily indented. Numerous small GABA-ir neurons and a few medium-sized GABA-ir neurons are found. The small GABA-ir neurons contain a few stacks of rough endoplasmic reticulum and the nucleus is oval-shaped. The medium-sized GABA-ir neurons have well-developed Golgi fields, a moderate number of rough endoplasmic reticulum stacks and an indented nucleus. GABA-positive dendritic profiles containing vesicles also are observed. In the neuropil of the olivary pretectal nucleus, retinal terminals are found that contain round clear vesicles and electron-lucent mitochondria. They make asymmetric synaptic contacts (Gray type I) with dendritic profiles and with profiles containing vesicles. Terminals originating from the contralateral olivary pretectal nucleus exhibit small, round clear vesicles, electron-dense mitochondria and make asymmetric synaptic contacts (Gray type I) mainly with dendritic profiles. Two types of GABA-ir terminals were found. One type is incorporated in glomerulus-like arrangements, whereas the other type is not. GABA-ir terminals contain pleomorphic vesicles, electron-dense mitochondria and make symmetric synaptic contacts (Gray type II). Retinal terminals, terminals originating from the contralateral olivary pretectal nucleus and GABA-ir terminals are organized in glomerulus-like structures, in which dendrites of the large projection neurons form the central elements. Triadic arrangements are observed in these structures; a retinal terminal contacts a dendrite and a GABA-ir terminal and the GABA-ir terminal also contacts the dendrite. The complexity of the synaptic organization and the abundancy of inhibitory elements in the olivary pretectal nucleus suggest that the olivary pretectal nucleus is strongly involved in processing visual information in the pupillary light reflex arc.
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  • 50
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Key words Fascia dentata ; Mossy cells ; Interneurons ; Lucifer yellow ; Phaseolus vulgaris leucoagglutinin ; Septohippocampal projection ; Rat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract  Mossy cells in the hilus of the rat dentate gyrus are the main cells of origin of the dentate commissural and associational projections. They project along the septotemporal axis of the dentate gyrus and may thus influence the hippocampal signal flow in a longitudinal direction. To analyze the septal innervation of these hilar neurons, anterograde tracing with Phaseolus vulgaris leucoagglutinin (PHAL) was used in combination with intracellular labeling of mossy cells (Lucifer yellow). Anterogradely labeled septal fibers impinge on proximal and distal dendrites of hilar mossy cells but spare the cell body. In contrast, numerous aspiny hilar neurons, presumably GABAergic interneurons, receive a septal innervation on their somata and proximal primary dendrites. These data demonstrate that septal fibers show a specificity for the dendritic segments of hilar mossy cells. Since mossy cells project predominantly to adjacent hippocampal lamellae, the activity of adjacent portions of the dentate gyrus may be influenced by the septal input onto these neurons.
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  • 51
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Key words Anionic surfactants ; Sodium dodecyl sulphate ; Blood-brain barrier ; Rat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract  The blood-brain barrier (BBB) arises from epithelial-like tight junctions that virtually cement adjoining capillary endothelium together in the brain microvascolature. Several experimental manipulations have been shown able to increase the permeability of brain capillaries, by altering endothelial cell membrane integrity or activating specific biochemical pathways involved in regulation of BBB functionality. Because of its amphiphilic nature, sodium dodecyl sulphate (an anionic surfactant widely used as solubilizer or stabilizer in several pharmaceutical preparations; SDS) may enter into interactions with the major membrane components, which are lipids and proteins. The aim of the present study was to determine the effect of an intracarotid infusion of SDS (25, 50 and 100 µg/kg; infusion rate: 3 ml/min for 30 s) on the functionality of the BBB in the rat. An extensive, dose-dependent Evans blue extravasation was observed, in the ipsilateral brain hemisphere, 15 min following SDS infusion. These results were confirmed by the significant increase in [14C]α-aminoisobutyric acid ([14C]AIB) transport (evaluated by calculating a unidirectional transfer constant, K i, for the tracer from blood to brain) measured in several ipsilateral brain regions 2 min after SDS infusion; this SDS-elicited BBB opening to [14C]AIB proved to be reversible. Since the BBB is created by the plasma membrane and tight junctions of the endothelial cells, the change in BBB permeability caused by SDS might be explained as a nonspecific surfactant-membrane interaction. Furthermore, SDS might affect the functional characteristics of brain vascular endothelial cells by an interaction with specific BBB proteins and/or biochemical pathways. In conclusion, one can suggest that intracarotid infusion of SDS might provide a useful clinical approach for the intentional introduction of different substances into the brain. On the other hand, these findings should call attention to possible dangerous consequences of using SDS as solubilizer in drug excipients.
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  • 52
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    Experimental brain research 116 (1997), S. 97-103 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Key words Chronic constriction injury ; Infraorbital nerve ; Painful trigeminal neuropathy ; Heat-hyperalgesia ; Rat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract  Secondary trigeminal neuralgia (STN) follows an injury to the trigeminal nerve or one of its branches. Although rare, this condition results in great suffering and it is notoriously difficult to treat. The experimental analysis of painful neuropathy due to damage to the innervation of the limbs (e.g., the sciatic nerve) has progressed rapidly in recent years, but very few reports have appeared concerning experimental neuropathy in the trigemenial region. We report here an experimental rat model of trigeminal neuropathic pain produced by a chronic constriction injury to the infraorbital nerve (CCI-ION), and on a method that detects heat-evoked pain-related behavior. Rats with the CCI-ION have clear signs of heat-hyperalgesia when stimulated on the snout (the vibrissal pad). The hyperalgesia is seen both ipsi- and contralateral to the side of nerve injury, but is significantly more severe ipsilaterally, and lasts about 12 days.
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  • 53
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Key words Hippocampus ; Learning ; Memory ; Recovery ; Rat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract  The monosialoganglioside GM1 is a compound with neurotrophic properties found to foster functional recovery in various paradigms of brain damage. The present experiment examined whether systemic treatment with GM1 may facilitate behavioral recovery in rats with fimbria-fornix lesions and intrahippocampal grafts rich in cholinergic neurons. Among 68 Long-Evans female rats, 46 sustained a bilateral electrolytic lesion of the fimbria and the dorsal fornix and 22 were sham-operated. Fourteen days later, half the lesioned rats were subjected to intrahippocampal grafts of a fetal septal cell suspension. Starting a few hours after lesion surgery and over a 2-month period, half the rats of each surgical treatment group received a daily injection of GM1 (30 mg/kg i.p.), the other half being injected with saline as a control. All rats were subsequently tested for locomotor activity and radial maze learning. The lesions induced locomotor hyperactivity and impaired learning performances in both an uninterrupted and an interrupted radial maze testing procedure. In all rats with surviving grafts, the grafts had provided the hippocampus with a new and dense organotypic acetylcholinesterase-positive innervation pattern which did not differ between saline- and GM1-treated subjects. The scores/performances of the rats that had received only the grafts or only the GM1 treatment did not differ significantly from those of their respective lesion-only counterparts. However, in the radial-arm maze task, the grafted rats given GM1 showed improved learning performances as compared with their saline-treated counterparts: they used more efficient visit patterns under the uninterrupted testing conditions and made fewer errors under the interrupted ones. The results suggest that GM1 treatment or intrahippocampal grafts used separately do not attenuate the lesion-induced behavioral deficits measured in this experiment. However, when GM1 treatment and grafts are used conjointly, both may interact in a manner allowing part of these deficits to be attenuated.
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  • 54
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Key words Amino acid immunocytochemistry ; Axon collateralization ; Thalamus ; Fluorescent tracers ; Limbic system ; Rat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract  Small, stereotaxically guided injections of true blue (TB) were made into the retrosplenial granular cortex (RSg) and of diamidino yellow (DY) into the dorsal portion of the rostral pole of the thalamic reticular nucleus (TRN) in 16 adult rats to determine whether axons projecting from the anterior thalamic nuclear complex (ATN) to the TRN are branches of axons also projecting to the RSg. Following injections of the fluorescent dyes, serial coronal sections of the brain revealed single retrogradely labelled, and large numbers of double retrogradely labelled neuronal cell bodies in the ipsilateral anteroventral and anterodorsal nuclei and smaller numbers in the anteromedial nucleus of the ATN complex. In a se- cond series of six adult rats with similar double injections of TB and DY, two sections in three were immunoreacted, one with antiserum against glutamate and one with antiserum against aspartate, using indirect immunofluorescence with rhodamine to detect reactive cells. The great majority of both single and double retrogradely labelled cell bodies were also immunoreactive for aspartate or glutamate. In addition, a moderate to small number of non-immunolabelled neurons projecting to the TRN and/or to the RSg were also found in all three nuclei of the ATN complex. These results are compatible with the possibility that large numbers of neurons in the ATN send axonal branches to both the RSg and the TRN, and that many such neurons use glutamate and/or aspartate as transmitters. The findings also suggest that the projections from the ATN might be heterogeneous with respect to transmitter phenotype.
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  • 55
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    Experimental brain research 117 (1997), S. 324-340 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Key words Trigeminal nerve ; Mechanoreceptors ; Cutaneous sensory nerve ending ; Perivascular innervation ; Vibrissae ; Rat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract  It is well established that sensory perception becomes impaired with advancing age and that, in parallel, dystrophy and degeneration of axons occur in sensory pathways. In this study, the impact of aging was examined in the mystacial pad, which receives a large variety of sensory nerve endings organized in a highly predictable pattern. Mystacial pad specimens from aged (30 months old) and young adult (2–3 months old) female Sprague-Dawley rats were processed, in parallel, for immunohistochemical analyses with antibodies against human neuronal cytoplasmic protein (protein gene product 9.5), transmitter enzymes, and several neuropeptides. Several changes in cutaneous innervation including both degenerative and regenerative processes were evident in the aged rat: (1) the Merkel endings and lanceolate endings that emanate from large-caliber afferents in the whisker follicles were reduced and showed signs of degeneration. Furthermore, a reduction of piloneural complexes at the intervibrissal hairs were evident, but only in aged rats that showed more severe behavioral sensorimotor disturbances. In contrast, Ruffini endings as well as mechanoreceptors emanating from medium-caliber axons, i.e., transverse lanceolate and reticular endings, appeared normal. (2) A reduction was evident among two sets of unmyelinated epidermal endings; however, the epidermal innervation affiliated with the intervibrissal hairs appeared normal in the aged rat. (3) A loss of sympathetic neuropeptide tyrosine (NPY) or tyrosine hydroxylase-immunoreactive (IR) and somatosensory Calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP)-IR perivascular axons was paralleled by an increase in presumed parasympathetic NPY/CGRP-IR axons. (4) Two “novel” networks of fine-caliber axons were observed in the outer and inner root sheaths of the whisker follicles in the aged rat. (5) NPY was present in a population of small-caliber, somatosensory CGRP-IR axons in the aged rat. This may represent a de novo synthesis, since, normally, NPY-like immunoreactivity is not observed in this set of axons. Our results suggest that the sensory impairments occurring with advancing age are part of a peripheral process instigated by changes in nerve-target interactions and/or incapacitation of the neuronal machinery to sustain the axonal integrity.
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  • 56
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Key words “Central pain” ; Picrotoxin ; Epilepsy ; Acetylcholine ; Cortex ; Rat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract  In this study, we examined the modulation by acetylcholine of electrocorticographical (ECoG) ictal events and spontaneous pain-like behaviors following cortical application of the GABAA antagonist picrotoxin in the awake rat. Distilled water as vehicle, the cholinomimetic substance eserine, and the general muscarinic antagonist atropine were microinjected 10 min before the second microinjection of 2 μg picrotoxin into the hind paw region of the somatomotor cortex (SmI). Under these conditions, we observed that eserine (physostigmine, 1 μg, 10 μg, and 20 μg) did not consistently modify the number of the picrotoxin-induced ECoG spikes and bursts, but instead produced a massive enhancement of the number of hind paw licks compared with vehicle at 10 μg and, to a lesser extent, the number of the stereotyped “turn-in” and “neglected” paws following picrotoxin. In contrast, atropine (l μg, 10 μg, and 20 μg) increased the number of the picrotoxin-induced spikes and bursts at 10 μg and, at all doses, decreased the number of the picrotoxin-induced pain-like symptoms. Statistically significant changes for the number of paw lifts, licks, and “turn-in” paws were observed only with 10 μg. These results tend to show that epilepsy and pain are not strictly related to each other and also emphasize the cortex as a target for interactions between GABA and acetylcholine relative to “central” pain.
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  • 57
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Key words Hippocampus ; Commissural fibers ; Reactive sprouting ; Synaptogenesis ; Synaptophysin ; Rat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract  Expression of the synaptic vesicle protein synaptophysin was studied in lesion-induced sprouting neurons of the contralateral entorhinal cortex and in the contralateral dentate gyrus using immunocytochemistry at the light- and electron-microscopic level. Perikaryal immunoreactivity for synaptophysin was found between 8 and 10 days postlesion. Light microscopy revealed that synaptophysin immunostaining was present in almost all neurons of layers II and III of the contralateral medial entorhinal cortex. These neurons give rise to the sprouting, crossed temporodentate pathway. In addition, some hilar neurons of the contralateral dentate gyrus, which are the parent cells of sprouting commissural fibers, were immunostained for synaptophysin. Transient immunostaining for synaptophysin was observed within cell bodies and dendrites. Additionally, the cell bodies were outlined by immunoreactive puncta, identified by electron microscopy as nerve terminals. Our results revealed that sprouting neurons express the major synaptic vesicle protein synaptophysin during reactive synaptogenesis in a pattern that reflects biosynthesis and sorting of this protein as seen in developing neurons during synapse formation.
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  • 58
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Key words Locomotor recovery ; Neural transplantation ; Fictive locomotion ; Serotonin ; 6-Hydroxydopamine ; Zimelidine ; Rat ; Spinal
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract  Locomotor movements are programmed in a specialised neuronal network that is localised in the central nervous system and referred to as the central pattern generator (CPG) for locomotion. This CPG can be activated by pharmacological agents such as monoamines. The aim of the present study was to try to activate the CPGs by using cells that are supposed to release serotonin locally. Adult chronic spinal rats were injected with embryonic brainstem neurons within the spinal cord under a thoracic transection. This procedure resulted in a monoaminergic reinnervation of the lumbar enlargement. With the help of a specific neurotoxin for noradrenergic neurons (6-hydroxydopamine), it was possible to isolate the serotonergic system. After such transplantation of monoaminergic neurons and even with serotonergic neurons alone, a bilateral, alternating, rhythmic locomotor-like activity recovered in hindlimbs. Furthermore, this locomotor-like activity was clearly facilitated when the re-uptake of serotonin was blocked by zimelidine. Therefore, we conclude that transplanted embryonic serotonergic neurons are able to activate the CPG for locomotion.
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  • 59
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    Experimental brain research 113 (1997), S. 520-533 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Key words Spinal Ia terminations ; Action potentials ; Baclofen ; Calcium influx ; Cat ; Rat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract  In the ventral horn of the lumbar spinal cord of cats anaesthetised with pentobarbitone sodium, microelectrophoretically administered (–)-baclofen, but not (+)-baclofen, reversibly reduced the duration of the orthodromic action potential of muscle group Ia afferent terminations, but not those of muscle group I afferent myelinated fibres. The presumably submicromolar concentrations are already known to reversibly reduce excitatory transmitter release from muscle group Ia afferent terminations. Action potential durations were estimated from threshold recovery curves after an orthodromic impulse using an extracellular microstimulation technique. Both of these presynaptic effects of (–)-baclofen were blocked by baclofen antagonists, and neither appeared to be reduced by the potassium channel blocking agents tetraethylammonium and 4-aminopyridine. Tetraethylammonium and 4-aminopyridine also did not significantly modify the reduction by (–)-baclofen of monosynaptic field potentials in the lumbar cord of rats anaesthetised with pentobarbitone sodium. In the cat the maximum reduction by (–)-baclofen of termination action potentials was considerably less than that produced by cadmium ions, which, unlike (–)-baclofen, also reduced the action potential duration of group I myelinated fibres. These findings are consistent with a reduction by (–)-baclofen of the influx of calcium through voltage-activated channels in the membrane of group Ia terminations, a proposal which also accounts for the reduction by (–)-baclofen of the release of GABA at axo-axonic depolarizing synapses on these terminations. The results are discussed in relation to the mode of action of (–)-baclofen and the different sensitivities of transmitter release at various central synapses.
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  • 60
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Key words Forebrain ischemia ; Hyperglycemia ; Hippocampus ; Bioenergetic state ; Cyclosporin A ; Rat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract  A recent study from this laboratory has shown that brief transient ischemia (2 min 30 s) in normo- and hyperglycemic rats leads to moderate neuronal necrosis in CA1 cells of the hippocampus, of equal density in the two groups. However, hyperglycemic animals failed to depolarize during the ischemia, nor did they show a decrease in extracellular calcium concentration. The present study was undertaken to study the metabolic correlates to these unexpected findings. Normoglycemic (plasma glucose ∼6 mM) and hyperglycemic (∼20 mM) rats were subjected to ischemic periods of 1 min and 2 min 15 s (2 min 30 s with freezing delay considered), and their brains were frozen in situ. Samples of dorsal hippocampus were dissected at –22°C and extracted for the measurement of phosphocreatine (PCr), creatine, ATP, ADP, AMP, glucose, glycogen, and lactate. Normoglycemic animals showed rapid depletion of PCr, ATP, glucose, and glycogen, and a rise in lactate content to 10–12 mM·kg–1 during the ischemia. Hyperglycemic animals displayed a more moderate rate of fall of PCr and ATP, with ATP values exceeding 50% of control after 2 min 30 s. Glycogen stores were largely maintained, but degradation of glucose somewhat enhanced the lactic acidosis. The results demonstrate that hyperglycemic rats maintained ATP at levels sufficient to prevent cell depolarization and calcium influx during the ischemic period. However, the metabolic perturbation observed must have been responsible for the delayed neuronal damage. We speculate that lowered ATP, increased inorganic P, and oxidative stress triggered a delayed mitochondrial permeability transition (MPT), which led to delayed neuronal necrosis. This assumption was supported by a second series of experiments in which CA1 damage in hyperglycemic rats was prevented by cyclosporin A, a virtually specific inhibitor of the MPT.
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  • 61
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Key words Enkephalin ; GABA ; Basal ganglia ; 6-Hydroxydopamine ; Rat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract  In Parkinson’s disease the dopaminergic nigrostriatal pathway degenerates, resulting in an imbalance in activity of two pathways of information flow through the basal ganglia. In animal models of the disease, the striatonigral pathway becomes underactive and the striatopallidal pathway becomes overactive. In the present study immunocytochemistry for enkephalin and GABA and anterograde labelling were used to investigate whether morphological plasticity occurs in striatopallidal terminals following unilateral removal of the nigrostriatal dopaminergic pathway. Pallidal terminals were immunostained to reveal enkephalin and examined in the electron microscope (n=399). Immunoreactive synaptic bouton profiles were on average 64% larger on the experimental side 26 days after the lesion. Analysis of their shape revealed that those on the dopamine-depleted side of the brain were more irregular in profile and that their synaptic specialisations were more complex in shape but not significantly different in length. Striatopallidal terminals were also identified by GABA immunocytochemistry combined with anterograde labelling (n=20). Double-labelled boutons were significantly larger in cross-sectional area on the experimental side (57%). Analysis of terminals that were simply labelled by the immunogold method to reveal GABA (n=278) showed no significant differences in size between terminals from the dopamine-depleted and control side. This suggests that a substantial number of GABAergic terminals in the globus pallidus do not belong to the striatopallidal population of terminals. These morphological changes correlate with previous studies suggesting striatopallidal boutons are more active after destruction of dopaminergic input to the neostriatum.
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  • 62
    ISSN: 1432-1211
    Keywords: Key words CD4 ; Rat ; LEC ; thid ; Chromosomal mapping
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
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  • 63
    ISSN: 1432-1920
    Keywords: Key words Anterior cervical surgery ; Complications ; Infection ; Computed tomography ; Magnetic resonance imaging
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract We report a 44-year-old woman who developed an atypical retro-oesophageal abscess 4 years after anterior cervical surgery with fusion (ACSF). She presented with dysphagia but no fever or definite laboratory signs of inflammation. Delayed or chronic dysphagia following Cloward's operation is usually related to graft displacement. Infection may also, more rarely, be encountered in conjunction with dysphagia, but is typically associated with a classical clinical presentation and laboratory results. We recommend that in cases of delayed dysphagia without evidence of graft migration, the possibility of retropharyngeal infection should be considered, even in the absence of clinical signs or supporting laboratory evidence. MRI in this rare delayed complication is nonspecific but suggestive, and hence represents the imaging modality of choice in such situations.
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  • 64
    ISSN: 1432-1920
    Keywords: Key words Tuberous sclerosis ; Magnetic resonance imaging ; Pulse sequences
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract We carried out fluid-attenuated inversion recovery (FLAIR) pulse sequences with long repetition and echo times in seven children with tuberous sclerosis, and compared them with conventional spin-echo (SE) sequences. FLAIR images exhibited higher sensitivity than conventional SE images to cortical and subcortical tubers. The low signal intensity of cerebrospinal fluid on FLAIR images allowed more accurate delineation of the cortical and subcortical tubers. However, T1-weighted imaging was still superior for delineation of subependymal nodules.
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  • 65
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    Neuroradiology 39 (1997), S. 411-413 
    ISSN: 1432-1920
    Keywords: Key words Inferior sagittal sinus ; Cerebral venous thrombosis ; Magnetic resonance imaging
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract We present a case of isolated inferior sagittal sinus thrombosis shown on CT, MRI and angiography. This condition has not, to our knowledge, been described previously.
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  • 66
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    Neuroradiology 39 (1997), S. 418-422 
    ISSN: 1432-1920
    Keywords: Key words Ventriculography ; Magnetic resonance imaging ; Gadolinium DTPA
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract We report intrathecal use of gadolinium DTPA for MRI of the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF). In two patients with leptomeningeal carcinomatosis, we injected 0.01 mmol gadolinium DTPA into the lateral ventricle via an Ommaya device. Coronal T1-weighted images of the head were obtained at 0.2 T prior to and after injection. There was pronounced enhancement of CSF close to the injection site, allowing good delineation of CSF and surrounding brain tissue. No side effects occurred. MRI with intrathecal administration of highly diluted gadolinium DTPA may be a promising alternative to conventional investigation of CSF-filled cavities using iodinated X-ray contrast media or radionuclides.
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  • 67
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    Neuroradiology 39 (1997), S. 423-426 
    ISSN: 1432-1920
    Keywords: Key words Leukodystrophy ; adult onset ; autosomal dominant ; Magnetic resonance imaging
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract We report MRI findings in a family with an autosomal-dominant, adult-onset neurological disorder. The clinical picture, the white matter changes detected on MRI and the absence of any laboratory abnormality suggested the diagnosis of leukodystrophy with an unknown biochemical defect. Autosomal-dominant inheritance is extremely rare in this kind of disease, and most reported families have not undergone MRI. We performed MRI and clinical examination of 17 members of our family; 9 affected subjects, at different stages of the disease, were detected. The most characteristic MRI findings were initially symmetrical areas of signal change in the white matter of the trigonal region; demyelination extending thereafter to the frontal and parietal regions, partially involving subcortical white matter; the temporal lobe and optic radiations were less involved; the internal capsule and corpus callosum were involved later, in a dorsoventral direction; patchy demyelination was evident in the late stages in the brain stem; the cerebellum was spared even in the latest stages of the disease. While pathological examination is essential to characterise and classify these kinds of diseases, MRI can make substantial contributions to understanding their natural history, and to detect early signs of the disease.
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  • 68
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    Neuroradiology 39 (1997), S. 453-457 
    ISSN: 1432-1920
    Keywords: Key words Otosclerosis ; otospongiosis ; Computed tomography ; Magnetic resonance imaging ; Tympanocochlear scintigraphy
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract Our aim was to determine whether MRI reliably shows pathology in patients with active otosclerosis (otospongiosis). We studied five patients with clinical and audiometric signs of this disorder and positive findings on high-resolution CT and tympanocochlear scintigraphy. Contrast enhancement of otospongiotic lesions was found in all affected ears, and could be topographically related to demineralised otospongiotic foci on CT. In lesions in the lateral wall of the labyrinth MRI sometimes showed the pathology better than CT, where partial-volume effects could be troublesome.
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  • 69
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    Neuroradiology 39 (1997), S. 495-498 
    ISSN: 1432-1920
    Keywords: Key words Reye's syndrome ; Computed tomography ; Magnetic resonance imaging
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract Early MRI in a case of clinically established Reye's syndrome confirmed CT findings of compressed ventricles and additionally demonstrated signal alterations in the thalamus, mesencephalon and pons. On follow-up MRI the pontine lesion had vanished by 1 week later, while the thalamic lesion persisted for more than 2 months. The patient, however, recovered without neurological sequelae.
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  • 70
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    Neuroradiology 39 (1997), S. 483-489 
    ISSN: 1432-1920
    Keywords: Key words Brain ; magnetic resonance imaging ; Brain ; tumours ; Magnetic resonance imaging ; diffusion studies
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract We used MRI for in vivo measurement of brain water self-diffusion in patients with intracranial tumours. The study included 28 patients (12 with high-grade and 3 with low-grade gliomas, 7 with metastases, 5 with meningiomas and 1 with a cerebral abscess). Apparent diffusion coefficients (ADC) were calculated in a single axial slice through the tumours; the sequence was sensitive to diffusion along the cephalocaudal axis. Our main finding was that ADC in contrast-enhancing areas within cerebral metastases was statistically significantly higher than ADC in contrast-enhancing areas in high-grade gliomas (P≤ 0.05). Furthermore, the ADC in oedema surrounding metastases were statistically significantly higher the ADC in oedema around high-grade gliomas (P≤ 0.02). The ADC in patients with meningiomas did not differ significantly from those seen with high-grade gliomas or cerebral metastases. The highest ADC were found within cystic or necrotic tumour areas. In one patient with a cerebral abscess, suspected of having a high-grade glioma, the ADC was similar to that in high-grade gliomas. The finding of higher ADC in cerebral metastases than in high-grade gliomas may be helpful in trying to distinguish between these tumours preoperatively; it suggests increased free extracellular and/or intracellular water fraction in cerebral metastases. The method seems to hold potential for further noninvasive characterisation of intracranial tumours.
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  • 71
    ISSN: 1432-1920
    Keywords: Key words Pituitary gland ; infection ; abscess ; Magnetic resonance imaging
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract Pituitary abscesses, rare lesions, may be divided into primary and secondary types. Primary pituitary abscesses occur within a previously healthy gland, while secondary abscesses arise within an existing lesion, such as an adenoma, craniopharyngioma, or Rathke's cleft cyst. Secondary abscesses share radiologic characteristics with the lesions from which they arise. There has been no review of the MRI characteristics of primary pituitary abscesses. We report two cases and review the literature. The typical primary pituitary abscess gives the same or slightly lower signal than brain on T1-weighted images, and could be mistaken for a solid mass or presumed to represent a pituitary adenoma. Contrast-enhanced images are useful, demonstrating absence of central enhancement, suggesting a fluid or necrotic center. In one of our cases, meningeal enhancement was obvious; this has not been reported previously and may be diagnostic, when associated with a rim-enhancing pituitary mass.
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  • 72
    ISSN: 1432-1920
    Keywords: Key words Temporal lobe epilepsy ; Limbic system ; Hippocampus ; Magnetic resonance imaging
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract We performed MRI on 27 patients with clinically proven temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE), all with prior EEG lateralisation, and 10 volunteers, studied to evaluate disparity in size arising from biological variation (group 1). Three-dimensional spoiled GRASS (3DSPGR) sequences provided 2-mm contiguous sections of the limbic system, enabling assessment of the hippocampus (HC), fornix (FN) and mamillary body (MB). Measurements of FN and MB width were made from a workstation. Any percentage difference in size was computed. In 19 cases there was unilateral abnormality in the HC (group 2); in 18 and 19 cases respectively there was a smaller FN and MB on the same side as the abnormal HC. This percentage difference in size was significantly greater than that in group 1 in the FN and MB in 17 and 17 cases respectively. Comparison of percentage difference computations for FN and MB between groups 1 and 2 showed high statistical significance (P 〈 0.0002). In 5 patients with clinical TLE the HC was normal on MRI (group 3). Unequal FN and MB sizes were found in 4, significant in 2. Comparison of percentage difference computations for FN and MB showed statistical significance (P 〈 0.0005 and P 〈 0.0003 respectively). There was no case of discordance between the sides of hippocampal abnormality and the smaller FN or MB or between the sides of smaller FN and MB. The strong concordance between the changes in the HC and those in the FN and MB suggests that this combination will play an important role in the assessment of TLE and limbic system abnormality.
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  • 73
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    Neuroradiology 39 (1997), S. 589-592 
    ISSN: 1432-1920
    Keywords: Key words Lumbar spine ; post-operative ; Contrast media ; Fat suppression ; Magnetic resonance imaging
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract In ten patients who had undergone lumbar laminectomy, visual assessment of epidural scar enhancement and diagnostic confidence was performed after 0.1 mmol/kg gadodiamide intravenously, again after a further 0.2 mmol/kg, and once more using a fat-suppression sequence. The single-dose contrast-enhanced T1-weighted images showed clear enhancement of epidural scar in eight cases, and clearly improved diagnostic confidence as regards scar and/or disc herniation in six. Triple-dose contrast-enhanced images showed further increase in epidural enhancement clearly in only two cases and marginally in six, with no significant increase in diagnostic confidence. Fat-suppression, performed in eight cases, showed a further clear increase in epidural enhancement in seven cases, but again no increase in diagnostic confidence. In one patient with arachnoiditis contrast enhancement and diagnostic confidence increased only slightly after each contrast injection, and again with the fat-suppression sequence. Increasing contrast medium dose was thus not useful following laminectomy when epidural scarring obscures a possible recurrent disc herniation. Use of fat suppression may, however, permit reduction of the dose of contrast medium necessary to provide adequate scar enhancement.
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  • 74
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    Neuroradiology 39 (1997), S. 737-740 
    ISSN: 1432-1920
    Keywords: Key words Epidural haematoma ; Spine ; Magnetic resonance imaging ; Computed tomographic myelography
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract We present a case of spontaneous spinal epidural haematoma (SSEH) with a rare clinical course of repeated spontaneous recovery and relapse. The patient suffered three episodes of upper-back pain of sudden onset followed by sensory and motor dysfunction after weight lifting. In the first two episodes, the neurological deficits recovered spontaneously and completely. In the last episode, paraplegia persisted even after emergency surgery. Serial studies with computed tomographic (CT) myelography and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) demonstrated the remitting and relapsing course of the SSEHs. The possible causes of the SSEHs and the mechanisms of spontaneous recovery are discussed.
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  • 75
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    Neuroradiology 39 (1997), S. 747-750 
    ISSN: 1432-1920
    Keywords: Key words Schwannoma ; Nerve sheath tumours ; Face neoplasms ; Magnetic resonance imaging
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract Neurosarcoma is a rare tumour originating from the sheath of peripheral nerves. Facial lesions have been reported in about 20 patients. We describe the MRI appearances of neurosarcoma with histological correlation in three patients. The lesions lay in the submandibular region, the left parapharyngeal space and the right orbit. MRI showed a well-defined mass with mixed components. The lesions were moderately heterogeneous on T1-weighted images in two cases and on T2-weighted images in all cases. Gadolinium enhancement occurred in all cases to variable degrees. In two cases, small high signal foci were seen on T2-weighted sequences. MRI appearances of neurosarcoma are not specific.
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  • 76
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    Neuroradiology 39 (1997), S. 741-746 
    ISSN: 1432-1920
    Keywords: Key words Computed tomography ; Magnetic resonance imaging ; Nasopharyngeal carcinoma
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract Precise assessment of the extent of nasopharyngeal carcinoma (NPC) represents the basic step towards optimal treatment. We compared the capacity of CT and MRI in assessing the extent of NPC in 67 patients. MRI was superior to CT in demonstrating lesions in the retropharyngeal node, skull base, intracranial area, carotid space, longus colli muscle and levator palatini muscle. Of 25 cases in which retropharyngeal adenopathy was recognised only on MRI, seven had been reported as showing oropharyngeal involvement and 18 as primary extension to the carotid space on CT. MRI showed skull-base involvement in 40 patients compared with 27 on CT and intracranial involvement in 38 patients versus 24 on CT. There was not a single case in which skull base invasion was seen on CT but not on MRI. MRI enabled improved recognition of tumour infiltration of longus colli muscles (34 cases compared with 15 on CT). It allowed us to clarify 12 questionable sinonasal opacities on CT. Overall, T-staging was changed in 18 of 67 patients (26.9 %), including upstaging in 15 cases and downstaging in 3 cases, after comparing CT with MRI. The nodel status was changed from negative on CT to positive on MRI in 4 of 67 patients (6 %). We believe that MRI allows more accurate evaluation of the extent of NPC than CT and should be the primary mode of investigation.
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  • 77
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    Neuroradiology 39 (1997), S. 815-817 
    ISSN: 1432-1920
    Keywords: Key words Enucleation ; Optic nerve ; Magnetic resonance imaging
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract We examined five patients who had enucleation of one eye for inflammatory or neoplastic disease, using MRI at 1.5 Tesla. None had symptoms referable to the enucleated orbit. In addition, age- and-sex matched individuals were imaged as control subjects, and a further 15 subjects, referred for other than orbital disease, were reviewed. Measurements were made retrospectively of the dimensions of the optic chiasm to establish normal values. All five patients showed abnormalities on MRI following enucleation: abnormal signal within the optic nerve remnant on short τ inversion recovery (STIR) images, and atrophy of the nerve remnant and the chiasm. These findings were not apparent in the control or normal subjects. Such findings are to be expected following enucleation and should not be interpreted as indicating active pathology.
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  • 78
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    Neuroradiology 39 (1997), S. 870-872 
    ISSN: 1432-1920
    Keywords: Key words Spinal cord ; compression ; Haematopoiesis ; extramedullary ; Thalassaemia ; Magnetic resonance imaging
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract Spinal epidural extramedullary haematopoiesis is very rare in thalassaemia. A 27-year-old man with thalassaemia intermedia presented with symptoms and signs of spinal cord compression. MRI showed a thoracic spinal epidural mass, representing extramedullary haematopoietic tissue, compressing the spinal cord. Following radiotherapy, serial MRI revealed regression of the epidural mass and gradual resolution of spinal cord oedema.
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  • 79
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    Neuroradiology 39 (1997), S. 873-876 
    ISSN: 1432-1920
    Keywords: Key words Parry-Romberg Syndrome ; Suppressive therapy ; Magnetic resonance imaging
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract Parry-Romberg syndrome is a poorly – understood disorder characterized by progressive hemifacial atrophy involving the skin, soft tissue, and bone. Involvement of the central nervous system with impairment in neurologic function occurs infrequently. We describe a child with this syndrome in whom central nervous system involvement, documented on serial MRI, played a prominent role. We have attempted to correlate the clinical course with the radiologic findings, and to determine the impact of prednisone and methotrexate on the intracranial lesions.
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  • 80
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    Neuroradiology 39 (1997), S. 139-141 
    ISSN: 1432-1920
    Keywords: Key words Oculomotor nerve paralysis ; Lyme disease ; Magnetic resonance imaging
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract Lyme disease is a cause of illness involving multiple organ systems, including, in 10–15 % of cases, the nervous system. Peripheral radiculoneuritis, cranial neuritis, encephalitis and myelitis are among the neurological manifestations found in the second and third stages. We present the MRI findings in isolated oculomotor nerve involvement by Lyme disease and discuss the differential diagnosis.
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  • 81
    ISSN: 1432-1920
    Keywords: Key words Myotonic dystrophy ; Magnetic resonance imaging ; Trinucleotide repeats ; Cognitive impairment
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract MRI was performed in 13 patients with the adult form of myotonic dystrophy (MD) and compared with that of sex- and age-matched normal controls. There was some cerebral atrophy in the patients and marked thickening of the skull in three of them, associated with ossification of the falx cerebri in two. We found high-signal areas on T 2-weighted images in the white matter in 9 (70 %) of the patients; five showed high-signal areas in the subcortical white matter of the temporal lobes. These findings were associated with intellectual impairment in only one patient, who had a history of a difficult birth and temporal lobe epilepsy.
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  • 82
    ISSN: 1432-1920
    Keywords: Key words Wilson's disease ; Magnetic resonance imaging ; Portal-systemic encephalopathy
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract Most reports of MRI in Wilson's disease have been of abnormal low-signal lesions on T1-weighted images and high signal intensity on T2-weighted images. In contrast, we report three patients who had high-signal lesions in the globus pallidus on T1-weighted images, a finding seen in patients with portal-systemic encephalopathy. The possible causes include the paramagnetic effect of copper or iron and accumulation of Alzheimer type II glial cells.
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  • 83
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    Neuroradiology 39 (1997), S. 180-184 
    ISSN: 1432-1920
    Keywords: Key words Encephalitis ; Japanese B ; Magnetic resonance imaging
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract We document the MRI features in seven patients with Japanese encephalitis. MRI was carried out on a 1.5 T system within 10–60 days of onset. In all the patients MRI revealed bilateral thalamic lesions, haemorrhagic in five. Signal changes were present in the cerebrum in four patients, the midbrain and cerebellum in three each, the pons in two and the basal ganglia in one. The lesions were haemorrhagic in three of the four patients with lesions in the cortex, two of the three with lesions in the midbrain and cerebellum, but the pontine lesions were haemorrhagic in both patients. Spinal cord involvement was seen in one of the three patients who underwent MRI. In two patients MRI was repeated 3 years after the onset, showing marked reduction in abnormal signal; and all the lesions gave low signal on both T1- and T2-weighted images. Bilateral thalamic involvement, especially haemorrhagic, may be considered characteristic of Japanese encephalitis, especially in endemic areas.
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  • 84
    ISSN: 1432-1920
    Keywords: Key words Brain ; Toxic encephalopathy ; Methanol intoxication ; Magnetic resonance imaging
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract We present the MRI findings of cerebral and optic pathway damage in the acute and subacute stages of methanol intoxication. In the acute stage, CT and MRI showed bilateral haemorrhagic necrosis of the corpus striatum and infarcts in the anterior and middle cerebral arterial territories. MRI in the subacute stage demonstrated atrophy of the optic chiasm and prechiasmatic optic nerves in addition to the cerebral infarcts. The patient survived, with total blindness.
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  • 85
    ISSN: 1432-1920
    Keywords: Key words Brain metastasis hemorrhagic ; Papillary thyroid cancer ; Magnetic resonance imaging
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract We report a 40-year-old woman, who initially developed cerebellar symptoms, with multiple hemorrhagic brain metastases from a papillary thyroid cancer. Intracranial masses gave heterogeneous high signal on T 1-weighted and T 2-weighted images, hemosiderin rims on the latter. Some of the tumors showed contrast enhancement. Metastatic thyroid cancer is a consideration in a patient with multiple hemorrhagic masses.
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  • 86
    ISSN: 1432-1920
    Keywords: Key words Facial nerve ; Magnetic resonance imaging ; Gadolinium
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract We prospectively analysed the normal contrast-enhanced MRI features of the facial nerve and determined criteria for pathological contrast enhancement. We studied 31 patients with clinically normal facial nerves with T1-weighted images before and after contrast medium. The intensity, thickness and right-left symmetry of enhancement were assessed in each segment and correlated with MRI features observed in abnormal facial nerves. Enhancement along at least one segment of the facial nerve was seen in 98 % of cases, but only within the facial canal: labyrinthine segment: 78.2 %; geniculate ganglion: 96.9 %; tympanic: 88.4 %; mastoid: 66.6 %. Marked (++) to intense (+++) enhancement was seen in the labyrinthine segment in 17.4 %, the geniculate ganglion in 36.3 %, and the tympanic (25.6 %) and mastoid (7.1 %) segments, whereas intense enhancement was only seen in the geniculate ganglion (6 %) and the tympanic segment (11.6 %). A right-left asymmetry was noted in 69 % of cases. No correlation was found between enhancement and the thickness of the nerve. No enhancement of the eighth nerve was seen. We suggest three criteria for pathological enhancement: enhancement outside the facial canal; extension of enhancement to the eighth nerve; and intense enhancement in the labyrinthine and/or mastoid segments.
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  • 87
    ISSN: 1432-1920
    Keywords: Key words Sarcoma ; meningeal ; Magnetic resonance imaging ; Tumours ; intracranial ; children
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract Meningeal sarcomas are very rare, highly aggressive tumours affecting children more frequently than adults. The clinical course and MRI of meningeal sarcomas in two cases are discussed with special regard to possible misinterpretation. In one case MRI demonstrated a circumscribed mass in contact with the meninges, with central areas of haemorrhage. In the other, a case of primary leptomeningeal sarcomatosis, several MRI examinations over the course of almost a year were unhelpful, despite severe neurological complaints. Then MRI revealed meningeal contrast enhancement all over the brain and spinal canal, together with cerebral infarcts. MRI of meningeal sarcomas has not been discussed in the literature. MRI did not permit specific diagnosis, but enabled visualisation of the extent of the tumour and/or meningeal involvement. Early histological diagnosis is indispensable for adequate treatment.
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  • 88
    ISSN: 1432-1920
    Keywords: Key words Fluid-attenuated inversion recovery sequences ; Normal brain ; Magnetic resonance imaging
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract Axial fast FLAIR images of the brains of 40 normal volunteers in four age groups between 16 and 55 years were examined and the number and size of areas of increased white-matter signal recorded. Increased signal in the corticospinal tract region was seen at the level of the internal capsule in all subjects, extending up towards the centrum semiovale and down towards the pons for 0.5–5.5 cm (median 2.5 cm). In all cases the IIIrd and IVth ventricles were outlined by a thin line of high signal. Focal areas of high signal (caps) were seen around the frontal and occipital horns in 90 % and 77 % respectively; 54 % of caps were asymmetrical. None of the above features varied with the age or sex of the subject, but the numbers of discrete white matter ’lesions' increased with age. The findings are used to suggest guidelines for the identification of areas of ’normal' high signal to be excluded in quantification of lesions on fast FLAIR images.
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  • 89
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    Neuroradiology 39 (1997), S. 276-277 
    ISSN: 1432-1920
    Keywords: Key words Tumours ; spinal Meningioma ; Sciatica ; Magnetic resonance imaging
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract We report a 27-year-old woman with atypical sciatica due to a giant, rapidly growing, lumbar (T12-S1) meningioma. The unique features of this case are discussed and the importance of early investigation by MRI of patients with atypical low back pain and sciatica is highlighted.
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  • 90
    ISSN: 1432-1920
    Keywords: Key words Corpus callosum ; dysgenesis ; Developmental anomalies ; Probst's bundles ; Anterior commissure ; Magnetic resonance imaging
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract We analysed the MRI findings in 23 patients with callosal dysgenesis in relation to their associated telencephalic anomalies to investigate the morphological significance of the development of Probst's bundles and the anterior commissure in congenital callosal dysgenesis. We classified callosal dysgenesis into three types: total defect (9 patients), partial defect (7) and hypoplasia (7). Associated anomalies were observed in 15 patients, including migration disorder (8 patients), micrencephaly (5), and lipoma (2). The remaining 8 patients had no associated anomalies. Probst's bundles were not identified in 4 patients with a severe migration disorder. An absent or hypoplastic anterior commissure was observed in 9 of the 16 patients with callosal defect and all 7 of those with callosal hypoplasia. Colpocephaly and keyhole dilatation of the temporal horns were seen in 16 and 21 patients, respectively. Callosal dysgenesis may occur not only through a defect in the callosal anlage, but also from impaired growth of axonal fibres projecting from the cerebral isocortex. Therefore, associated telencephalic anomalies may be responsible for additional features in callosal dysgenesis. Consequently, identification of Probst's bundles and the anterior commissure may be important when assessing cortical development in patients with callosal dysgenesis.
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  • 91
    ISSN: 1432-1920
    Keywords: Key words Arteries ; vertebral ; Arteries ; dissection ; Magnetic resonance imaging ; Magnetic resonance angiography
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract A review of 4,500 angiograms yielded 11 patients with dissection of the vertebral arteries who had MRI and (in 4 patients) MR angiography (MRA) in the acute phase of stroke. One patient with incidental discovery at arteriography of asymptomatic vertebral artery dissection and two patients with acute strokes with MRI and MRA findings consistent with vertebral artery dissection were included. Dissection occurred after neck trauma or chiropractic manipulation in 4 patients and was spontaneous in 10. Dissection involved the extracranial vertebral artery in 9 patients, the extra-intracranial junction in 1, and the intracranial artery in 4. MRI demonstrated infarcts in the brain stem, cerebellum, thalamus or temporo-occipital regions in 7 patients with extra- or extra-intracranial dissections and a solitary lateral medullary infarct in 4 patients (3 with intracranial and 1 with extra-intracranial dissection). In 2 patients no brain abnormality related to vertebral artery dissection was found and in one MRI did not show subarachnoid haemorrhage revealed by CT. Intramural dissecting haematoma appeared as crescentic or rounded high signal on T1-weighted images in 10 patients examined 3–20 days after the onset of symptoms. The abnormal vessel stood out in the low signal cerebrospinal fluid in intracranial dissections, whereas it was more difficult to detect in extracranial dissections because of the intermediate-to-high signal of the normal perivascular structures and slow flow proximal and distal to the dissection. In two patients examined within 36 h of the onset, mural thickening was of intermediate signal intensity on T1-weighted images and high signal on spin-density and T2-weighted images. MRA showed abrupt stenosis in 2 patients and disappearance of flow signal at and distal to the dissection in 5. Follow-up arteriography, MRI or MRA showed findings consistent with occlusion of the dissected vessel in 6 of 8 patients.
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  • 92
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    Neuroradiology 39 (1997), S. 354-356 
    ISSN: 1432-1920
    Keywords: Key words Spine ; Atlas ; Axis ; Osteoarthritis ; Magnetic resonance imaging
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract We present the MRI appearances of advanced degenerative changes at the atlanto-odontoid (AO) joint. Changes including obliteration of the joint space, subchondral sclerosis and osteophytosis were clearly depicted on fast gradient-echo T1-weighted MRI images. Recognition of these changes may be helpful in the diagnosis in patients with suboccipital pain.
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  • 93
    ISSN: 1432-1920
    Keywords: Key words Morquio's disease ; Craniocervical junction ; Brain ; Magnetic resonance imaging
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract We reviewed MRI of the brain and cervical spine in 11 patients with Morquio's disease. No abnormality was seen in the brain. The odontoid peg was abnormal in all patients, with varying degrees of cord compression due to an anterior soft tissue mass and indentation by the posterior arch of the atlas. The degree of cord compression was more marked than suggested by the symptoms and signs. We recommend MRI of the cervical spine in children with Morquio's disease before the development of neurological symptoms, to optimise the timing and type of surgical intervention.
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  • 94
    ISSN: 1432-1920
    Keywords: Key words Chordoma ; clivus ; Magnetic resonance imaging ; Differential diagnosis
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract We present six proven cases of chordoma of the clivus studied by CT and MRI, with special attention to the extent of the tumour and to the signal intensity after intravenous gadolinium. MRI is the best technique for assessing the extent of the tumour but CT is important for showing osteolysis. Our aim was to determine differential diagnostic neuroradiological criteria. Reliable signs of chordoma of the skull base are: posterior extension to the pontine cistern; a lobulated, “honeycomb” appearance after gadolinium; the swollen appearance of the bone in the early stages; bone erosion on CT and frequent extension to critical structures such as the circle of Willis, cavernous sinuses and brain stem.
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  • 95
    ISSN: 1432-1920
    Keywords: Key words Aneurysm ; giant ; Magnetic resonance imaging ; Dural tail sign
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract The “dural tail” sign on gadolinium (Gd-DTPA)-enhanced MRI has been described in association with meningiomas. Various series with histopathological correlation have shown that in some cases there is tumour invasion into the dura mater, but in the majority of cases it represents a hypervascular, non-neoplastic reaction. While this sign was originally thought to be specific for meningioma, subsequent case reports have described the presence of a dural tail in other intra- and extra-axial lesions. We present a patient with a giant aneurysm arising from the P2 segment of the right posterior cerebral artery, adjacent to the tentorium, with a prominent dural tail on Gd-DTPA-enhanced MRI. In this location, differentiation of an aneurysm from a meningioma was critical.
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  • 96
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    Neuroradiology 39 (1997), S. 811-814 
    ISSN: 1432-1920
    Keywords: Key words Meningeal melanocytoma ; Magnetic resonance imaging ; Computed tomography
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract We report the MRI and CT findings of an intracranial meningeal melanocytoma (IMM) arising from Meckel's cave and review the imaging characteristics of IMM. On CT, IMM constantly appear as well-circumscribed, isodense to slightly dense, extra-axial tumours with homogeneous contrast enhancement. This appearance is nonspecific and similar to that of meningiomas or small neuromas. On MRI, the signal of IMM is strongly related to the amount of melanin pigment: the more melanin, the more shortening of T1 and T2 relaxation times. Only when it shows as a homogeneous mass, bright on T1 and dark on T2 weighting, can a specific diagnosis of a melanin-containing tumour be made. However, this still cannot provide a distinction between IMM and malignant meningeal melanoma.
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  • 97
    ISSN: 1432-1920
    Keywords: Key words Spine ; Spinal cord ; compression ; Arachnoid cyst ; extradural ; Myelography ; Computed tomography ; Magnetic resonance imaging
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract Extradural arachnoid cysts are uncommon expanding lesions in the spinal canal which may communicate with the subarachnoid space. Usually in the lower thoracic spine, they may cause symptoms by compressing the spinal cord or nerve roots. We report cases of thoracic and lumbar arachnoid cysts studied by cystography, myelography, CT and MRI. These techniques showed extradural cystic lesions containing cerebrospinal fluid, with variable communication with the subarachnoid space, causing anterior displacement and flattening of the spinal cord.
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  • 98
    ISSN: 1432-1920
    Keywords: Key words Sturge-Weber syndrome ; Single-photon emission computed tomography ; Magnetic resonance imaging ; Computed tomography
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract Demonstration of the full extent of abnormality in patients with the Sturge-Weber syndrome (SWS) is important for prognosis and in planning surgery to remove the seizure focus. We compared single-photon emission computed tomography (SPECT), MRI and CT in nine children under the age of 4 years with seizures as part of SWS, in an attempt to determine the optimal method of imaging in different clinical settings. Seven unilateral and two bilateral cases were studied by interictal 99mtechnetium hexamethylpropyleneamineoxime (HMPAO) SPECT, and contrast-enhanced CT and MRI, giving information on 11 abnormal hemispheres. All imaging modalities showed abnormalities in every child. Perfusion imaging showed focal regions of decreased uptake in 9 of 11 (82 %) abnormal hemispheres and demonstrated a widespread decrease but no focal defect in 2; it also revealed crossed cerebellar diaschisis in 2 cases. CT demonstrated typical gyriform calcification in 9 of 11 (82 %) affected hemispheres. Contrast-enhanced MRI showed more extensive involvement than contrast-enhanced CT in 5 of 11 (45 %) cases. The area of hypoperfusion shown by SPECT was smaller than the area of contrast enhancement on MRI in 6 of 11 cases (55 %), comparable in 3 (27 %) and larger in 2 cases (18 %). CT is sufficient to confirm the clinical diagnosis of SWS, but MRI frequently shows more extensive abnormal areas. 99mTc HMPAO imaging is a useful addition when it is important to know the full extent of the disease, for example prior to surgery. It is likely to detect areas of hypoperfusion, representing ischaemic regions, which may act as an epileptogenic focus and may not be shown by CT or MRI.
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  • 99
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    Neuroradiology 39 (1997), S. 296-301 
    ISSN: 1432-1920
    Keywords: Key words Mesenchymal chondrosarcoma ; Orbital neoplasms ; Magnetic resonance imaging ; Computed tomography
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract Extraskeletal mesenchymal chondrosarcoma is a relatively uncommon entity, an orbital location being extremely rare. A review of the literature revealed 16 reported cases of primary orbital mesenchymal chondrosarcoma demonstrated by plain film and CT. To the best of our knowledge, the MRI features of orbital extraskeletal mesenchymal chondrosarcoma have not been previously reported. We present the case of an 18-year-old man with a 2-year history of progressive proptosis of the right eye who underwent CT, dynamic CT, MRI without and with gadolinium enhancement, and magnetic resonance angiography of the orbits. CT of orbital mesenchymal chondrosarcoma demonstrates a well-defined mass with multiple areas of fine and coarse calcification and shows moderate contrast enhancement. The noncalcified portions of the mass demonstrate signal intensity lower than or equal to gray matter on T1-weighted images and are isointense to the gray matter on T2-weighted images. Dynamic CT reveals delayed contrast enhancement. MRI has proven to be a valuable diagnostic tool in the diagnosis and differentiation of well-defined intraorbital masses. By a combination of CT and MRI, it appears mesenchymal chondrosarcoma can be differentiated from other intraorbital lesions, such as cavernous hemangioma, hemangiopericytoma, orbital amyloidosis and fibrous histiocytoma.
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  • 100
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    Neuroradiology 39 (1997), S. 326-328 
    ISSN: 1432-1920
    Keywords: Key words Encephalopathy ; Portal-systemic ; Basal ganglia ; Embolization ; Magnetic resonance imaging
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract We report MRI in a patient with portal-systemic encephalopathy, in which the high signal in the basal ganglia on T1-weighted images showed marked resolution after successful embolization of the intrahepatic portal-systemic venous shunt.
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