A case of hemimegalencephaly was studied by means of neuroimaging (CT, MRI and PET) and magnetoencephalography (MEG). Hemimegalencephaly (HM) is a neuronal migration disorder. This is the first report of evaluation of HM with the use of PET and MEG from not only the morphological but also the functional point of view. PET with 11C-glucose showed a low radioactive concentration in the affected hemisphere, which suggested a metabolic deficit. MEG proved the epileptic foci existed mainly in the affected hemisphere, especially around a heterotopia and the pachygyric cortex, which was disclosed on MRI.
The present study deals with the concentration and fatty acid composition of cholesterol esters in rat brains infected experimentally with measles virus to induce acute encephalitis. The left side of the cerebrum, as well as other portions of the brain, when inoculated percutaneously contained a large amount of cholesterol esters. The major fatty acids from the esters in the brain were C16:0, C16:1, C18:0, and C18:1; those from the serum were C18:1, C18:2, and C20:4. This result indicates that cholesterol esters may not come from serum but can be synthesized in situ, even in the brain with acute viral infection.
A ten-year-old Japanese boy, who fell ill with rubella encephalitis at 6 years of life, disclosed reversible symmetrical white matter low attenuation in both X-ray CT and 11C-glucose positron emission tomography (PET), which was newly applied to the illness. He recovered completely without neurological sequelae, similar in X-ray CT and PET.
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