Our observation that in many patients with MS-related TN a pontine demyelinating plaque and neurovascular compression coexist should prompt neurologists to seek possible neurovascular compression in patients with MS-related TN.
Diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) analyses the movement of water molecules within the cerebral white matter thus providing information on ultrastructural brain changes. We studied 18 patients with cervical dystonia (CD), 16 with blepharospasm (BSP) and 35 years age-matched healthy controls. DTI data were obtained with a Philips 1.5 Tesla scanner and then processed to obtain maps of fractional anisotropy (FA) and mean diffusivity (MD). Twenty-three square regions of interest of uniform size were positioned on the FA maps and then automatically transferred to the MD maps. FA and MD values in the corpus callosum, left and right putamen, right caudate, left and right pre-frontal cortical area and left supplementary motor area in CD patients differed significantly from those in healthy controls. No significant regional differences were found between patients with BSP and healthy controls. In the CD group, age, duration and severity of dystonia did not correlate with regional FA/MD values, whereas the duration of botulinum toxin treatment correlated significantly with the MD value in the right-pre-frontal cortex. The abnormal DTI findings in patients with CD suggest the presence of brain ultrastructural changes in adult-onset primary CD.
Background and Purpose-It has been demonstrated that left ventricular hypertrophy (LVH) confers an increased risk for major cerebrovascular events. However, it is still uncertain whether there is an association between LVH and asymptomatic cerebrovascular damage in hypertensive patients. In this study, we investigated the relation between LVH, evaluated by both echocardiography (Echo-LVH) and electrocardiography (ECG-LVH), and preclinical cerebral damage, as identified by magnetic resonance imaging. Methods-One hundred ninety-five consecutive patients were enrolled in the study. We evaluated other risk factors such as age, sex, presence of diabetes, cholesterol levels, smoking status, heart rate, and systolic and diastolic blood pressure. Asymptomatic cerebrovascular damage was considered silent cerebral lesions: punctate lesions, lacunes, and territorial lesions. Patients were divided into 2 groups according to the presence of asymptomatic brain lesions. Results-The 2 groups of patients differed only in terms of age and systolic pressure. More importantly, the prevalence of Echo-LVH (83% versus 47.7%, PϽ0.001) and ECG-LVH (56% versus 22%, PϽ0.001) was significantly higher in patients with asymptomatic brain lesions. A multivariate analysis allowed us to recognize LVH as the only independent predictor for the presence of ischemic lacunes (PϽ0.001). Moreover, we evaluated the impact of left ventricular geometry on asymptomatic cerebrovascular damage, and we found that hypertensives with concentric hypertrophy displayed more pronounced asymptomatic cerebrovascular damage compared with patients with eccentric hypertrophy. Conclusions-Our study demonstrates that LVH is associated with cerebral damage even in the absence of clinical symptoms. Thus, the presence of cardiac damage provides important prognostic clues about the presence of asymptomatic cerebral damage.
ObjectiveWe investigated resting-state (RS)-fMRI using independent component analysis (ICA) to determine the functional connectivity (FC) between networks in chronic migraine (CM) patients and their correlation with clinical features.MethodsTwenty CM patients without preventive therapy or acute medication overuse underwent 3T MRI scans and were compared to a group of 20 healthy controls (HC). We used MRI to collect RS data in 3 selected networks, identified using group ICA: the default mode network (DMN), the executive control network (ECN), and the dorsal attention system (DAS).ResultsCompared to HC, CM patients had significantly reduced functional connectivity between the DMN and the ECN. Moreover, in patients, the DAS showed significantly stronger FC with the DMN and weaker FC with the ECN. The higher the severity of headache, the increased the strength of DAS connectivity, and the lower the strength of ECN connectivity.ConclusionThese results provide evidence for large-scale reorganization of functional cortical networks in chronic migraine. They suggest that the severity of headache is associated with opposite connectivity patterns in frontal executive and dorsal attentional networks.
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