1. Clinical significance of asymmetric hypointense signals in minimum intensity projections of brain magnetic resonance imaging in children with primary headache.
- Author
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Han, Min Jeong, Park, So Yeon, Hwang, Seungbae, and Kim, Sun Jun
- Subjects
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CRANIAL radiography , *ANALYSIS of variance , *MAGNETIC resonance imaging , *RETROSPECTIVE studies , *FISHER exact test , *DISEASE susceptibility , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *CHI-squared test , *DATA analysis software , *PRIMARY headache disorders , *CHILDREN - Abstract
Purpose: This study aimed to observe the changes of venous continuity using the susceptibility weighted imaging-minimum intensity projection (SWI-MinIP) images in children with primary headache. Methods: The headache types were classified following the International Headache Society's diagnostic criteria. Patients with secondary headaches were excluded. The presence of asymmetric vasculature in SWI-MinIP images was visually assessed. Moreover, the relationship between headache patterns and asymmetric hypointense signals was analyzed. Results: In this single-center, retrospective study from 2016 to 2020, among 251 cases of primary headache (male/female, 108/143; mean age, 11.4 ± 4.0 years), 137 (54.6%), 75 (29.9%), and 39 (15.5%) patients had migraine, tension-type headache, and other primary headaches, respectively. On SWI-MinIP images, 14 (5.6%) patients showed an asymmetric venous pattern. All patients with SWI-MinIP asymmetry were included in the migraine group, accounting for 10.2% of patients with migraine. Five (35.7%) and nine (64.3%) patients were included in the aura and non-aura groups, respectively, without a significant difference in the frequency of asymmetric hypointense signals between the two groups (p = 0.325). All 14 patients with asymmetric hypervascularity had brain MRI within 12 h of headache onset. Ten (71.4%) of the 14 patients showed consistency between the laterality of headache and the hemisphere of predominant vascularity in SWI-MinIP. Conclusion: Patients with migraine had increased cerebral venous perfusion in the most involved region of the headache on the SWI-MinIP view on a 3.0 T scanner, which can be used as a qualitative indicator with low sensitivity and high specificity for the diagnosis of primary headache in the acute phase (< 12 h). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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