The authors report serial brain MR findings from a 2-year-old girl with rotavirus encephalopathy. The lesion in the splenium of the corpus callosum showed restricted proton diffusion, suggesting local cytotoxic edema. Diffusion-weighted images demonstrated the lesion more conspicuously than other techniques, such as fluid-attenuated inversion-recovery and T1- and T2-weighted images. The findings were reversible on follow-up MRI obtained 4 days later. Diffusion-weighted MRI is a potentially useful method for detecting early changes of rotavirus encephalopathy, although the mechanism of the restricted diffusion is not clearly identified.
Double-echo dynamic magnetic resonance (MR) imaging was used to evaluate both vascularity and permeability of tissues simultaneously. Vascularity was evaluated on the basis of the T2*-shortening effect due to the intravascular fraction of the contrast agent and permeability on the basis of the T1-shortening effect due to the extravascular fraction. Meningioma was characterized on the basis of higher vascularity and neurinoma on the basis of higher permeability. The proposed method enables better tissue characterization.
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