The frequency, course and clinical significance of changes in regional cerebral blood flow (rCBF) during bacterial meningitis were investigated in 14 adult patients. The results of 99mTc-hexamethylpropylene amine oxime (HMPAO) single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) were compared with the clinical signs and findings using cerebral angiography and conventional CT. HMPAO SPECT was performed 2-15 days (median 4.5 days) after the onset of neurological disease. Decreased HMPAO accumulation was detected in 13 patients. SPECT studies revealed focal hypoperfusion corresponding to the clinical symptoms in 6 patients suffering from hemiparesis or hemiataxia. Conventional cranial CT disclosed brain infarction in only 1 patient. Focal hypoperfusion was also found in 7 of 8 patients without clinical evidence of focal neurological deficits. In 6 patients, HMPAO SPECT findings were abnormal although cerebral angiography was normal. At follow-up examinations 3-45 weeks after the acute disease, abnormalities revealed by HMPAO SPECT had improved or had even disappeared in all patients studied. Our results indicate that reduced rCBF is a frequent finding in bacterial meningitis in the adult. In most patients it probably represents a functional and reversible disorder without structural lesion detectable on CT.
Previous studies have demonstrated that the radical scavenger superoxide dismutase completely blocked the increase of regional cerebral blood flow (rCBF), intracranial pressure (ICP), and brain water content during the early phase of experimental pneumococcal meningitis in the rat. To obtain information on the nature of the reactive oxygen species involved, the effect of catalase, a hydrogen peroxide scavenger, was tested. Rats injected intracisternally with live pneumococci were either untreated or received intravenous catalase. The increase of rCBF and brain water content in infected untreated rats was significantly attenuated by catalase 6 h after intracisternal challenge. ICP increased in both infected groups, with a trend toward lower ICP with catalase treatment. Cerebrospinal fluid white blood cell counts were not significantly different between infected groups. These results and previous experiments using superoxide dismutase suggest that the increase of rCBF, ICP, and brain water content is mainly caused by superoxide or superoxide reaction products.
A 26-year-old patient complained of a series of migraine attacks with aura accompanied by slight pleocytosis and gadolinium (Gd-DTPA) enhancement next to the left middle cerebral artery. The migraine attacks and Gd-DTPA enhancement were reversible during prophylactic treatment with flunarizine.
Along with the jugular veins, the vertebral veins serve as an important pathway for venous blood returning from the brain. In this study, the authors report duplex sonographic findings in 138 healthy subjects without central nervous disease. Successful insonation was possible in 70.7% of all examined vessels. Bilateral insonation was achieved in 86 subjects (62.3%). Only 1 vertebral vein was detected in 23 persons (16.7%), whereas no vein was found in 29 persons (21%). The authors observed a marked variation of peak flow velocities ranged (5-81 cm/s, mean +/- standard deviation, 23.9 +/- 12.3 cm/s). No significant gender-related or side-to-side differences or age influences on flow velocities were detected. The authors' findings may be of relevance when discussing flow velocities in the vertebral veins in cases of cerebrovenous disorders (e.g., dural sinus thrombosis) or in patients after neck dissection.
30 patients clinically suspected of suffering from venous sinus thrombosis were examined by MRT with venous MR angiography (FLASH 2-D). In 8 patients selective arterial angiography was also performed and 5 patients were followed up by MR angiography after an interval of three months. The MRT images and individual MR angiography images were analysed and 3-D reconstruction performed. In 11 patients MR angiography correctly demonstrated venous sinus thrombosis; the most frequently affected were the superior sagittal sinus, the ascending cerebral veins and the transverse sinus. Compared with DSA, magnetic resonance angiography achieved a high degree of accuracy in our patients. It was significantly better in evaluating the basal sinus system whereas thrombosis of individual ascending veins was better shown by DSA. In summary, primary use of MRT and MR angiography is recommended for the diagnosis of venous sinus thrombosis.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.