27 results on '"Maeder, Philippe"'
Search Results
2. Sound recognition and localization in man: specialized cortical networks and effects of acute circumscribed lesions.
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Adriani, Michela, Maeder, Philippe, Meuli, Reto, Thiran, Anne Bellmann, Frischknecht, Rolf, Villemure, Jean-Guy, Mayer, James, Annoni, Jean-Marie, Bogousslavsky, Julien, Fornari, Eleonora, Thiran, Jean-Philippe, and Clarke, Stephanie
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CEREBRAL dominance , *VISUAL perception , *DIRECTIONAL hearing , *PATIENTS , *PRECANCEROUS conditions , *VISION - Abstract
Functional imaging studies have shown that information relevant to sound recognition and sound localization are processed in anatomically distinct cortical networks. We have investigated the functional organization of these specialized networks by evaluating acute effects of circumscribed hemispheric lesions. Thirty patients with a primary unilateral hemispheric lesion, 15 with right-hemispheric damage (RHD) and 15 with left-hemispheric damage (LHD), were evaluated for their capacity to recognise environmental sounds, to localize sounds in space and to perceive sound motion. One patient with RHD and 2 with LHD had a selective deficit in sound recognition; 3 with RHD a selective deficit in sound localization; 2 with LHD a selective deficit in sound motion perception; 4 with RHD and 3 with LHD a combined deficit of sound localization and motion perception; 2 with RHD and 1 with LHD a combined deficit of sound recognition and motion perception; and 1 with LHD a combined deficit of sound recognition, localization and motion perception. Five patients with RHD and 6 with LHD had normal performance in all three domains. Deficient performance in sound recognition, sound localization and/or sound motion perception was always associated with a lesion that involved the shared auditory structures and the specialized What and/or Where networks, while normal performance was associated with lesions within or outside these territories. Thus, damage to regions known to be involved in auditory processing in normal subjects is necessary, but not sufficient for a deficit to occur. Lesions of a specialized network was not always associated with the corresponding deficit. Conversely, specific deficits tended not be associated predominantly with lesions of the corresponding network; e.g. deficits in auditory spatial tasks were observed in patients whose lesions involved to a larger extent the shared auditory structures and the specialized What network than the specialized Where network, and deficits in sound recognition in patients whose lesions involved mostly the shared auditory structures and to a varying degree the specialized What network. The human auditory cortex consists of functionally defined auditory areas, whose intrinsic organization is currently not understood. In particular, areas involved in the What and Where pathways can be conceived as: (1) specialized regions, in which lesions cause dysfunction limited to the damaged part; observed deficits should be then related to the specialization of the damaged region and their magnitude to the extent of the damage; or (2) specialized networks, in which lesions cause dysfunction that may spread over the two specialized networks; observed deficits may then not be related to the damaged region and their magnitude not proportional to the extent of the damage. Our results support strongly the network hypothesis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2003
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3. Optic nerve thickening on high-spatial-resolution MRI predicts early-stage postlaminar optic nerve invasion in retinoblastoma.
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de Bloeme, Christiaan M., Jansen, Robin W., Göricke, Sophia, Grauwels, Steven T. L., van Elst, Sabien, Ketteler, Petra, Brisse, Hervé J., Galluzzi, Paolo, Cardoen, Liesbeth, Sirin, Selma, Koob, Mériam, Maeder, Philippe, van der Valk, Paul, Moll, Annette C., de Graaf, Pim, and de Jong, Marcus C.
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Objectives: To assess the diagnostic accuracy of nerve thickening on MRI to predict early-stage postlaminar optic nerve invasion (PLONI) in retinoblastoma. Furthermore, this study aimed to incorporate measurements into a multiparametric model for radiological determination of PLONI. Methods: In this retrospective multicenter case–control study, high-spatial-resolution 3D T2-weighted MR images were used to measure the distal optic nerve. Histopathology was the reference standard for PLONI. Two neuroradiologists independently measured the optic nerve width, height, and surface at 0, 3, and 5 mm from the most distal part of the optic nerve. Subsequently, PLONI was scored on contrast-enhanced T1-weighted and 3D T2-weighted images, blinded for clinical data. Optic nerve measurements with the highest diagnostic accuracy for PLONI were incorporated into a prediction model for radiological determination of PLONI. Results: One hundred twenty-four retinoblastoma patients (median age, 22 months [range, 0–113], 58 female) were included, resulting in 25 retinoblastoma eyes with histopathologically proven PLONI and 206 without PLONI. ROC analysis of axial optic nerve width measured at 0 mm yielded the best area under the curve of 0.88 (95% confidence interval: 0.79, 0.96; p < 0.001). The optimal width cutoff was ≥ 2.215 mm, with a sensitivity of 84% (95% CI: 64, 95%) and specificity of 83% (95% CI: 75, 89%) for detecting PLONI. Combining width measurements with the suspicion of PLONI on MRI sequences resulted in a prediction model with an improved sensitivity and specificity of respectively up to 88% and 92%. Conclusion: Postlaminar optic nerve thickening can predict early-stage postlaminar optic nerve invasion in retinoblastoma. Clinical relevance statement: This study provides an additional tool for clinicians to help determine postlaminar optic nerve invasion, which is a risk factor for developing metastatic disease in retinoblastoma patients. Key Points: • The diagnostic accuracy of contrast-enhanced MRI for detecting postlaminar optic nerve invasion is limited in retinoblastoma patients. • Optic nerve thickening can predict postlaminar optic nerve invasion. • A prediction model combining MRI features has a high sensitivity and specificity for detecting postlaminar optic nerve invasion. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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4. Complete washout of a colloid cyst on MRI after partial removal by endoscopic approach.
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Robert, Thomas, Maeder, Philippe, Levivier, Marc, and Pollo, Claudio
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CYSTS (Pathology) , *SURGERY , *ENDOSCOPY , *CEREBRAL ventricles , *COLLOIDS , *HEADACHE , *HYDROCEPHALUS , *MAGNETIC resonance imaging , *TOMOGRAPHY , *DIAGNOSIS - Abstract
A letter to the editor is presented which is concerned with a patient who had a complete washout of a colloid cyst on a magnetic resonance imaging test after partial removal by endoscopic approach.
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- 2012
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5. Biologically effective dose correlates with linear tumor volume changes after upfront single-fraction stereotactic radiosurgery for vestibular schwannomas.
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Tuleasca, Constantin, Faouzi, Mohamed, Maeder, Philippe, Maire, Raphael, Knisely, Jonathan, and Levivier, Marc
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STEREOTACTIC radiosurgery , *PHYSIOLOGICAL effects of radiation , *SCHWANNOMAS , *BENIGN tumors , *ACOUSTIC neuroma , *TUMOR classification , *INTEGRAL functions - Abstract
Vestibular schwannomas (VSs) are benign, slow-growing tumors. Management options include observation, surgery, and radiation. In this retrospective trial, we aimed at evaluating whether biologically effective dose (BED) plays a role in tumor volume changes after single-fraction first intention stereotactic radiosurgery (SRS) for VS. We compiled a single-institution experience (n = 159, Lausanne University Hospital, Switzerland). The indication for SRS was decided after multidisciplinary discussion. Only cases with minimum 3 years follow-up were included. The Koos grading, a reliable method for tumor classification was used. Radiosurgery was performed using Gamma Knife (GK) and a uniform marginal prescription dose of 12 Gy. Mean BED was 66.3 Gy (standard deviation 3.8, range 54.1–73.9). The mean follow-up period was 5.1 years (standard deviation 1.7, range 3–9.2). The primary outcome was changes in 3D volumes after SRS as function of BED and of integral dose received by the VS. Random-effect linear regression model showed that tumor volume significantly and linearly decreased over time with higher BED (p < 0.0001). Changes in tumor volume were also significantly associated with age, sex, number of isocenters, gradient index, and Koos grade. However, the effect of BED on tumor volume change was moderated by time after SRS and Koos grade. Lower integral doses received by the VSs were inversely correlated with BED in relationship with tumor volume changes (p < 0.0001). Six (3.4%) patients needed further intervention. For patients having uniformly received the same marginal dose prescription, higher BED linearly and significantly correlated with tumor volume changes after SRS for VSs. BED could represent a potential new treatment paradigm for patients with benign tumors, such as VSs, for attaining a desired radiobiological effect. This could further increase the efficacy and decrease the toxicity of SRS not only in benign tumors but also in other SRS indications. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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6. Correlation of gene expression with magnetic resonance imaging features of retinoblastoma: a multi-center radiogenomics validation study.
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Jansen, Robin W., Roohollahi, Khashayar, Uner, Ogul E., de Jong, Yvonne, de Bloeme, Christiaan M., Göricke, Sophia, Sirin, Selma, Maeder, Philippe, Galluzzi, Paolo, Brisse, Hervé J., Cardoen, Liesbeth, Castelijns, Jonas A., van der Valk, Paul, Moll, Annette C., Grossniklaus, Hans, Hubbard, G. Baker, de Jong, Marcus C., Dorsman, Josephine, and de Graaf, Pim
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MAGNETIC resonance imaging , *GENE expression , *RETINOBLASTOMA , *GENE expression profiling - Abstract
Objectives: To validate associations between MRI features and gene expression profiles in retinoblastoma, thereby evaluating the repeatability of radiogenomics in retinoblastoma. Methods: In this retrospective multicenter cohort study, retinoblastoma patients with gene expression data and MRI were included. MRI features (scored blinded for clinical data) and matched genome-wide gene expression data were used to perform radiogenomic analysis. Expression data from each center were first separately processed and analyzed. The end product normalized expression values from different sites were subsequently merged by their Z-score to permit cross-sites validation analysis. The MRI features were non-parametrically correlated with expression of photoreceptorness (radiogenomic analysis), a gene expression signature informing on disease progression. Outcomes were compared to outcomes in a previous described cohort. Results: Thirty-six retinoblastoma patients were included, 15 were female (42%), and mean age was 24 (SD 18) months. Similar to the prior evaluation, this validation study showed that low photoreceptorness gene expression was associated with advanced stage imaging features. Validated imaging features associated with low photoreceptorness were multifocality, a tumor encompassing the entire retina or entire globe, and a diffuse growth pattern (all p < 0.05). There were a number of radiogenomic associations that were also not validated. Conclusions: A part of the radiogenomic associations could not be validated, underlining the importance of validation studies. Nevertheless, cross-center validation of imaging features associated with photoreceptorness gene expression highlighted the capability radiogenomics to non-invasively inform on molecular subtypes in retinoblastoma. Clinical relevance statement: Radiogenomics may serve as a surrogate for molecular subtyping based on histopathology material in an era of eye-sparing retinoblastoma treatment strategies. Key Points: • Since retinoblastoma is increasingly treated using eye-sparing methods, MRI features informing on molecular subtypes that do not rely on histopathology material are important. • A part of the associations between retinoblastoma MRI features and gene expression profiles (radiogenomics) were validated. • Radiogenomics could be a non-invasive technique providing information on the molecular make-up of retinoblastoma. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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7. Robust thalamic nuclei segmentation method based on local diffusion magnetic resonance properties.
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Battistella, Giovanni, Najdenovska, Elena, Maeder, Philippe, Ghazaleh, Naghmeh, Daducci, Alessandro, Thiran, Jean-Philippe, Jacquemont, Sébastien, Tuleasca, Constantin, Levivier, Marc, Bach Cuadra, Meritxell, and Fornari, Eleonora
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THALAMUS , *THALAMIC nuclei , *MAGNETIC resonance imaging of the brain , *SPHERICAL harmonics , *IMAGE segmentation - Abstract
The thalamus is an essential relay station in the cortical-subcortical connections. It is characterized by a complex anatomical architecture composed of numerous small nuclei, which mediate the involvement of the thalamus in a wide range of neurological functions. We present a novel framework for segmenting the thalamic nuclei, which explores the orientation distribution functions (ODFs) from diffusion magnetic resonance images at 3 T. The differentiation of the complex intra-thalamic microstructure is improved by using the spherical harmonic (SH) representation of the ODFs, which provides full angular characterization of the diffusion process in each voxel. The clustering was performed using the k-means algorithm initialized in a data-driven manner. The method was tested on 35 healthy volunteers and our results show a robust, reproducible and accurate segmentation of the thalamus in seven nuclei groups. Six of them closely matched the anatomy and were labeled as anterior, ventral anterior, medio-dorsal, ventral latero-ventral, ventral latero-dorsal and pulvinar, while the seventh cluster included the centro-lateral and the latero-posterior nuclei. Results were evaluated both qualitatively, by comparing the segmented nuclei to the histological atlas of Morel, and quantitatively, by measuring the clusters' extent and the clusters' spatial distribution across subjects and hemispheres. We also showed the robustness of our approach across different sequences and scanners, as well as intra-subject reproducibility of the segmented clusters using additional two scan-rescan datasets. We also observed an overlap between the path of the main long-connection tracts passing through the thalamus and the spatial distribution of the nuclei identified with our clustering algorithm. Our approach, based on SH representations of the ODFs, outperforms the one based on angular differences between the principle diffusion directions, which is considered so far as state-of-the-art method. Our findings show an anatomically reliable segmentation of the main groups of thalamic nuclei that could be of potential use in many clinical applications. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2017
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8. Rare stroke mechanisms in 4154 consecutive patients: causes, predictors, treatment, and outcomes.
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Vicino, Alex, Sirimarco, Gaia, Eskandari, Ashraf, Lambrou, Dimitris, Maeder, Philippe, Dunet, Vincent, and Michel, Patrik
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ISCHEMIC stroke , *DEATH rate - Abstract
Background: Rare mechanisms of stroke (RMS) in acute ischemic stroke (AIS) have rarely been studied applying a systematic approach. Our aim was to define the frequency, etiologies, predictors, and outcomes of RMS in a consecutive series of AIS. Methods: Data from consecutive patients from 2003 to 2016 were derived from the Acute STroke Registry and Analysis of Lausanne (ASTRAL). Frequency of subcategories of RMS was calculated. In a case–control design, RMS were compared to strokes of all other mechanisms. Outcome was assessed with 3-month Rankin-shift and 12-month mortality and recurrence rates. Results: Out of 4154 AISs, 222 (5.3%) were found to have a RMS (42.0% female, median age 66 years). The most frequent RMS etiologies were medical interventions (25.6%), active oncological disease (22.5%), and vasculitis (11.7%). In multivariate analysis, RMS patients were younger, had more preceding and bilateral strokes, and a higher admission temperature. They were associated with less traditional risk factors and more systemic disease (such as AIDS, coagulopathy, and cancer). RMS also had more early ischemic changes on plain CT, less revascularization treatments, and more symptomatic hemorrhagic transformations. They presented significantly higher 3-month disability (Rankin-shift-ORadj 1.74), 12-month recurrence (ORadj 1.99), and mortality rates (ORadj 2.41). Conclusions: RMS occurred in 5.3% of a large population of consecutive AISs and are most frequently related to medical interventions, cancer, and vasculitis. RMS patients have less traditional risk factors but more systemic comorbidities, hemorrhagic transformations, recurrences, and a worse long-term outcome. Identification of RMS has direct implications for early treatment and long-term outcome. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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9. Acute neurological disease as a trigger or co-occurrence of transient global amnesia: a case series and systematic review.
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Piffer, Silvio, Nannoni, Stefania, Maulucci, Francesco, Beaud, Valérie, Rouaud, Olivier, Cereda, Carlo W., Maeder, Philippe, and Michel, Patrik
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CEREBROVASCULAR disease , *SYSTEMATIC reviews , *RETROSPECTIVE studies , *AMNESIA , *NEURORADIOLOGY , *DISEASE complications ,MIGRAINE complications - Abstract
Background: Transient global amnesia (TGA) represents a benign neurological syndrome of unknown pathophysiology, often accompanied by vanishing hippocampal punctate lesions on diffusion-weighted imaging (hippocampal punctate diffusion lesion, HPDL). The recent literature suggests that TGA may be triggered by acute neurological conditions.Objective: To study patients with TGA triggered by an acute neurological disease.Methods: We retrospectively reviewed patients from two neurology centres with TGA (with or without HPDL) in whom an acute neurological condition could be identified as trigger. We also performed a systematic review of the literature of this situation using predefined search terms.Results: We identified 38 patients (median age 62 years, 55.3% female): 6 from our centres and 32 from the literature. Acute neurovascular diseases that preceded or were associated with TGA included ischemic and haemorrhagic strokes, convexity subarachnoid haemorrhage, and reversible cerebral vasoconstriction syndrome. As non-vascular acute neurological diseases, we identified migraine and peripheral-origin vertigo. The clinical manifestation of the neurological trigger showed a variable temporal relation with TGA onset; in some cases preceding and in others co-occurring with TGA manifestation. In some cases, presumed neurological triggers were asymptomatic and diagnosed from the neuroimaging done for the TGA.Conclusions: Acute vascular and non-vascular neurological events may trigger TGAs or may occur simultaneously. In the first case, such an acute neurological disease may activate direct pathways within the nervous systems leading to TGA, or alternatively elicit a bodily sympathetic overactivity cascade. In the second case, both neurological events may be the result of a common external stressor. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2022
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10. MRI software for diffusion-perfusion mismatch analysis may impact on patients' selection and clinical outcome.
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Pistocchi, Silvia, Strambo, Davide, Bartolini, Bruno, Maeder, Philippe, Meuli, Reto, Michel, Patrik, and Dunet, Vincent
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STROKE patients , *TREATMENT effectiveness , *MAGNETIC resonance imaging , *ENDOVASCULAR surgery - Abstract
Objective: Impact of different MR perfusion software on selection and outcome of patients with acute ischemic stroke (AIS) and large vessel occlusion (LVO) treated by endovascular thrombectomy (EVT) is unclear. We aimed at comparing two commercial MRI software, semi-automated with unadjusted (method A) and adjusted mask (method B), and fully automated (method C) in this setting. Methods: MRI from 144 consecutive AIS patients with anterior circulation LVO was retrospectively analysed. All diffusion- and perfusion-weighted images (DWI-PWI) were post-processed with the three methods using standard thresholds. Concordance for core and hypoperfusion volumes was assessed with Lin's test. Clinical outcome was compared between groups in patients who underwent successful EVT in the early and late time window. Results: Mean core volume was higher and mean hypoperfusion volume was lower in method C than in methods A and B. In the early time window, methods A and B found fewer patients with a mismatch ratio ≤ 1.2 than method C (1/67 [1.5%] vs. 12/67 [17.9%], p = 0.0013). In the late time window, methods A and B found fewer patients with a mismatch ratio < 1.8 than method C (3/46 [6.5%] and 2/46 [4.3%] vs. 18/46 [39.1%], p ≤ 0.0002). More patients with functional independence at 3 months would not have been treated using method C versus methods A and B in the early (p = 0.0063) and late (p ≤ 0.011) time window. Conclusions: MRI software for DWI-PWI analysis may influence patients' selection before EVT and clinical outcome. Key Points: • Method C detects fewer patients with favourable mismatch profile. • Method C might underselect more patients with functional independence at 3 months. • Software used before thrombectomy may influence patients' outcome. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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11. Visuo-motor pathways in humans revealed by event-related fMRI.
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Martuzzi, Roberto, Murray, Micah M., Maeder, Philippe P., Fornari, Eleonora, Thiran, Jean-Philippe, Clarke, Stephanie, Michel, Christoph M., and Meuli, Reto A.
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EYE-hand coordination , *EFFERENT pathways , *BIOLOGICAL neural networks , *NEURAL circuitry , *CENTRAL nervous system , *MAGNETIC resonance imaging - Abstract
Whether different brain networks are involved in generating unimanual responses to a simple visual stimulus presented in the ipsilateral versus contralateral hemifield remains a controversial issue. Visuo-motor routing was investigated with event-related functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) using the Poffenberger reaction time task. A 2 hemifield × 2 response hand design generated the “crossed” and “uncrossed” conditions, describing the spatial relation between these factors. Both conditions, with responses executed by the left or right hand, showed a similar spatial pattern of activated areas, including striate and extrastriate areas bilaterally, SMA, and M1 contralateral to the responding hand. These results demonstrated that visual information is processed bilaterally in striate and extrastriate visual areas, even in the “uncrossed” condition. Additional analyses based on sorting data according to subjects’ reaction times revealed differential crossed versus uncrossed activity only for the slowest trials, with response strength in infero-temporal cortices significantly correlating with crossed–uncrossed differences (CUD) in reaction times. Collectively, the data favor a parallel, distributed model of brain activation. The presence of interhemispheric interactions and its consequent bilateral activity is not determined by the crossed anatomic projections of the primary visual and motor pathways. Distinct visuo-motor networks need not be engaged to mediate behavioral responses for the crossed visual field/response hand condition. While anatomical connectivity heavily influences the spatial pattern of activated visuo-motor pathways, behavioral and functional parameters appear to also affect the strength and dynamics of responses within these pathways. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2006
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12. Bi-thalamic infarction due to a suprasellar germinoma.
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Zaldivar-Jolissaint, Julien, Kotowski, Marc, Maeder, Philippe, Levivier, Marc, and Daniel, Roy
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INFARCTION , *THALAMIC nuclei , *GERMINOMA - Abstract
A letter to the editor is presented on bi-thalamic infarction which is the potential cause to a suprasellar germinoma.
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- 2015
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13. Automated MRI-based volumetry of basal ganglia and thalamus at the chronic phase of cortical stroke.
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Baudat, Cindy, Maréchal, Bénédicte, Corredor-Jerez, Ricardo, Kober, Tobias, Meuli, Reto, Hagmann, Patric, Michel, Patrik, Maeder, Philippe, and Dunet, Vincent
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BASAL ganglia , *CARDIOVASCULAR diseases risk factors , *CHRONIC diseases , *DIGITAL image processing , *MAGNETIC resonance imaging , *STATISTICS , *STROKE , *THALAMUS , *THREE-dimensional imaging , *DATA analysis , *RETROSPECTIVE studies , *STROKE patients - Abstract
Purpose: We aimed at assessing the potential of automated MR morphometry to assess individual basal ganglia and thalamus volumetric changes at the chronic phase after cortical stroke. Methods: Ninety-six patients (mean age: 65 ± 18 years, male 55) with cortical stroke at the chronic phase were retrospectively included. Patients were scanned at 1.5 T or 3 T using a T1-MPRAGE sequence. Resulting 3D images were processed with the MorphoBox prototype software to automatically segment basal ganglia and thalamus structures, and to obtain Z scores considering the confounding effects of age and sex. Stroke volume was estimated by manual delineation on T2-SE imaging. Z scores were compared between ipsi- and contralateral stroke side and according to the vascular territory. Potential relationship between Z scores and stroke volume was assessed using the Spearman correlation coefficient. Results: Basal ganglia and thalamus volume Z scores were lower ipsilaterally to MCA territory stroke (p values < 0.034) while they were not different between ipsi- and contralateral stroke sides in non-MCA territory stroke (p values > 0.37). In MCA territory stroke, ipsilateral caudate nucleus (rho = − 0.34, p = 0.007), putamen (rho = − 0.50, p < 0.001), pallidum (rho = − 0.44, p < 0.001), and thalamus (rho = − 0.48, p < 0.001) volume Z scores negatively correlated with the cortical stroke volume. This relation was not influenced by cardiovascular risk factors or time since stroke. Conclusion: Automated MR morphometry demonstrated atrophy of ipsilateral basal ganglia and thalamus at the chronic phase after cortical stroke in the MCA territory. The atrophy was related to stroke volume. These results confirm the potential role for automated MRI morphometry to assess remote changes after stroke. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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14. Diagnostic Challenge: Answer.
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Carron, Pierre-Nicolas, Cavassini, Mathias, Maeder, Philippe, and Hugh, Olivier William
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TOMOGRAPHY , *CEREBRAL cortex diseases , *MAGNETIC resonance imaging , *EDEMA , *CEREBRAL toxoplasmosis , *POLYMERASE chain reaction - Abstract
The article presents the answer to the quiz concerning the unusual cerebral computed tomography image of a 28-year-old prison inmate with recurrent frontal headaches. It states that the weighted magnetic resonance images have shown a focal enhancing lesion with diffuse surrounding edema towards the frontal white matter. It confirms the diagnosis of cerebral toxoplasmosis through histology and polymerase chain reaction on a stereotaxic frontal biopsy.
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- 2010
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15. MRI-based assessment of the pineal gland in a large population of children aged 0-5 years and comparison with pineoblastoma: part II, the cystic gland.
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Sirin, Selma, Jong, Marcus, Galluzzi, Paolo, Maeder, Philippe, Brisse, Hervé, Castelijns, Jonas, Graaf, Pim, and Goericke, Sophia
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BRAIN , *RADIOGRAPHY , *PINEAL gland tumors , *ANTHROPOMETRY , *COMPARATIVE studies , *MAGNETIC resonance imaging , *MEDICAL cooperation , *PINEAL gland , *REGRESSION analysis , *RESEARCH , *RETINOBLASTOMA , *RETROSPECTIVE studies , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *CHILDREN , *DIAGNOSIS , *ANATOMY - Abstract
Introduction: Pineal cysts are a common incidental finding on brain MRI with resulting difficulties in differentiation between normal glands and pineal pathologies. The aim of this study was to assess the size and morphology of the cystic pineal gland in children (0-5 years) and compare the findings with published pineoblastoma cases. Methods: In this retrospective multicenter study, 257 MR examinations (232 children, 0-5 years) were evaluated regarding pineal gland size (width, height, planimetric area, maximal cyst(s) size) and morphology. We performed linear regression analysis with 99 % prediction intervals of gland size versus age for the size parameters. Results were compared with a recent meta-analysis of pineoblastoma by de Jong et al. Results: Follow-up was available in 25 children showing stable cystic findings in 48 %, cyst size increase in 36 %, and decrease in 16 %. Linear regression analysis gave 99 % upper prediction bounds of 10.8 mm, 10.9 mm, 7.7 mm and 66.9 mm, respectively, for cyst size, width, height, and area. The slopes (size increase per month) of each parameter were 0.030, 0.046, 0.021, and 0.25, respectively. Most of the pineoblastomas showed a size larger than the 99 % upper prediction margin, but with considerable overlap between the groups. Conclusion: We presented age-adapted normal values for size and morphology of the cystic pineal gland in children aged 0 to 5 years. Analysis of size is helpful in discriminating normal glands from cystic pineal pathologies such as pineoblastoma. We also presented guidelines for the approach of a solid or cystic pineal gland in hereditary retinoblastoma patients. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2016
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16. MRI-based assessment of the pineal gland in a large population of children aged 0-5 years and comparison with pineoblastoma: part I, the solid gland.
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Galluzzi, Paolo, Jong, Marcus, Sirin, Selma, Maeder, Philippe, Piu, Pietro, Cerase, Alfonso, Monti, Lucia, Brisse, Hervé, Castelijns, Jonas, Graaf, Pim, and Goericke, Sophia
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BRAIN , *RADIOGRAPHY , *PINEAL gland tumors , *AGE distribution , *ANTHROPOMETRY , *COMPARATIVE studies , *CONFIDENCE intervals , *MAGNETIC resonance imaging , *PINEAL gland , *REGRESSION analysis , *RETINOBLASTOMA , *SEX distribution , *RETROSPECTIVE studies , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *CHILDREN , *DIAGNOSIS , *ANATOMY - Abstract
Introduction: Differentiation between normal solid (non-cystic) pineal glands and pineal pathologies on brain MRI is difficult. The aim of this study was to assess the size of the solid pineal gland in children (0-5 years) and compare the findings with published pineoblastoma cases. Methods: We retrospectively analyzed the size (width, height, planimetric area) of solid pineal glands in 184 non-retinoblastoma patients (73 female, 111 male) aged 0-5 years on MRI. The effect of age and gender on gland size was evaluated. Linear regression analysis was performed to analyze the relation between size and age. Ninety-nine percent prediction intervals around the mean were added to construct a normal size range per age, with the upper bound of the predictive interval as the parameter of interest as a cutoff for normalcy. Results: There was no significant interaction of gender and age for all the three pineal gland parameters (width, height, and area). Linear regression analysis gave 99 % upper prediction bounds of 7.9, 4.8, and 25.4 mm, respectively, for width, height, and area. The slopes (size increase per month) of each parameter were 0.046, 0.023, and 0.202, respectively. Ninety-three percent (95 % CI 66-100 %) of asymptomatic solid pineoblastomas were larger in size than the 99 % upper bound. Conclusion: This study establishes norms for solid pineal gland size in non-retinoblastoma children aged 0-5 years. Knowledge of the size of the normal pineal gland is helpful for detection of pineal gland abnormalities, particularly pineoblastoma. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2016
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17. Assessment of early-stage optic nerve invasion in retinoblastoma using high-resolution 1.5 Tesla MRI with surface coils: a multicentre, prospective accuracy study with histopathological correlation.
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Brisse, Hervé, Graaf, Pim, Galluzzi, Paolo, Cosker, Kristel, Maeder, Philippe, Göricke, Sophia, Rodjan, Firazia, Jong, Marcus, Savignoni, Alexia, Aerts, Isabelle, Desjardins, Laurence, Moll, Annette, Hadjistilianou, Theodora, Toti, Paolo, Valk, Paul, Castelijns, Jonas, and Sastre-Garau, Xavier
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RETINOBLASTOMA , *OPTIC nerve diseases , *TUMOR grading , *MAGNETIC resonance imaging , *DIAGNOSTIC imaging - Abstract
Objectives: To assess the accuracy of high-resolution (HR) magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) in diagnosing early-stage optic nerve (ON) invasion in a retinoblastoma cohort. Methods: This IRB-approved, prospective multicenter study included 95 patients (55 boys, 40 girls; mean age, 29 months). 1.5-T MRI was performed using surface coils before enucleation, including spin-echo unenhanced and contrast-enhanced (CE) T1-weighted sequences (slice thickness, 2 mm; pixel size <0.3 × 0.3 mm). Images were read by five neuroradiologists blinded to histopathologic findings. ROC curves were constructed with AUC assessment using a bootstrap method. Results: Histopathology identified 41 eyes without ON invasion and 25 with prelaminar, 18 with intralaminar and 12 with postlaminar invasion. All but one were postoperatively classified as stage I by the International Retinoblastoma Staging System. The accuracy of CE-T1 sequences in identifying ON invasion was limited (AUC = 0.64; 95 % CI, 0.55 - 0.72) and not confirmed for postlaminar invasion diagnosis (AUC = 0.64; 95 % CI, 0.47 - 0.82); high specificities (range, 0.64 - 1) and negative predictive values (range, 0.81 - 0.97) were confirmed. Conclusion: HR-MRI with surface coils is recommended to appropriately select retinoblastoma patients eligible for primary enucleation without the risk of IRSS stage II but cannot substitute for pathology in differentiating the first degrees of ON invasion. Key Points: • HR-MRI excludes advanced optic nerve invasion with high negative predictive value. • HR-MRI accurately selects patients eligible for primary enucleation. • Diagnosis of early stages of optic nerve invasion still relies on pathology. • Several physiological MR patterns may mimic optic nerve invasion. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
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18. Long-Term Effects of Cannabis on Brain Structure.
- Author
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Battistella, Giovanni, Fornari, Eleonora, Annoni, Jean-Marie, Chtioui, Haithem, Dao, Kim, Fabritius, Marie, Favrat, Bernard, Mall, Jean-Frédéric, Maeder, Philippe, and Giroud, Christian
- Subjects
- *
CANNABIS (Genus) , *NEURAL development , *MARIJUANA , *CANNABINOIDS , *POISONS - Abstract
The dose-dependent toxicity of the main psychoactive component of cannabis in brain regions rich in cannabinoid CB1 receptors is well known in animal studies. However, research in humans does not show common findings across studies regarding the brain regions that are affected after long-term exposure to cannabis. In the present study, we investigate (using Voxel-based Morphometry) gray matter changes in a group of regular cannabis smokers in comparison with a group of occasional smokers matched by the years of cannabis use. We provide evidence that regular cannabis use is associated with gray matter volume reduction in the medial temporal cortex, temporal pole, parahippocampal gyrus, insula, and orbitofrontal cortex; these regions are rich in cannabinoid CB1 receptors and functionally associated with motivational, emotional, and affective processing. Furthermore, these changes correlate with the frequency of cannabis use in the 3 months before inclusion in the study. The age of onset of drug use also influences the magnitude of these changes. Significant gray matter volume reduction could result either from heavy consumption unrelated to the age of onset or instead from recreational cannabis use initiated at an adolescent age. In contrast, the larger gray matter volume detected in the cerebellum of regular smokers without any correlation with the monthly consumption of cannabis may be related to developmental (ontogenic) processes that occur in adolescence. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
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19. Pituitary blastoma: a pathognomonic feature of germ-line DICER1 mutations.
- Author
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Kock, Leanne, Sabbaghian, Nelly, Plourde, François, Srivastava, Archana, Weber, Evan, Bouron-Dal Soglio, Dorothée, Hamel, Nancy, Choi, Joon, Park, Sung-Hye, Deal, Cheri, Kelsey, Megan, Dishop, Megan, Esbenshade, Adam, Kuttesch, John, Jacques, Thomas, Perry, Arie, Leichter, Heinz, Maeder, Philippe, Brundler, Marie-Anne, and Warner, Justin
- Subjects
- *
BLASTOMAS , *EMBRYONAL tumors , *LYMPHOCYTE receptors , *TUMORS in children , *SOMATOFORM disorders , *DYSPLASIA , *CELLULAR pathology , *DISEASE risk factors - Abstract
Individuals harboring germ-line DICER1 mutations are predisposed to a rare cancer syndrome, the DICER1 Syndrome or pleuropulmonary blastoma-familial tumor and dysplasia syndrome [online Mendelian inheritance in man (OMIM) #601200]. In addition, specific somatic mutations in the DICER1 RNase III catalytic domain have been identified in several DICER1-associated tumor types. Pituitary blastoma (PitB) was identified as a distinct entity in 2008, and is a very rare, potentially lethal early childhood tumor of the pituitary gland. Since the discovery by our team of an inherited mutation in DICER1 in a child with PitB in 2011, we have identified 12 additional PitB cases. We aimed to determine the contribution of germ-line and somatic DICER1 mutations to PitB. We hypothesized that PitB is a pathognomonic feature of a germ-line DICER1 mutation and that each PitB will harbor a second somatic mutation in DICER1. Lymphocyte or saliva DNA samples ascertained from ten infants with PitB were screened and nine were found to harbor a heterozygous germ-line DICER1 mutation. We identified additional DICER1 mutations in nine of ten tested PitB tumor samples, eight of which were confirmed to be somatic in origin. Seven of these mutations occurred within the RNase IIIb catalytic domain, a domain essential to the generation of 5p miRNAs from the 5′ arm of miRNA-precursors. Germ-line DICER1 mutations are a major contributor to PitB. Second somatic DICER1 'hits' occurring within the RNase IIIb domain also appear to be critical in PitB pathogenesis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Comparison of cannabinoid concentrations in oral fluid and whole blood between occasional and regular cannabis smokers prior to and after smoking a cannabis joint.
- Author
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Fabritius, Marie, Chtioui, Haithem, Battistella, Giovanni, Annoni, Jean-Marie, Dao, Kim, Favrat, Bernard, Fornari, Eleonora, Lauer, Estelle, Maeder, Philippe, and Giroud, Christian
- Subjects
- *
CANNABINOIDS , *COMPARATIVE studies , *BLOOD doping in sports , *CANNABIS (Genus) , *PLACEBOS , *TETRAHYDROCANNABINOL - Abstract
A cross-over controlled administration study of smoked cannabis was carried out on occasional and heavy smokers. The participants smoked a joint (11 % Δ9-tetrahydrocannabinol (THC)) or a matching placebo on two different occasions. Whole blood (WB) and oral fluid (OF) samples were collected before and up to 3.5 h after smoking the joints. Pharmacokinetic analyses were obtained from these data. Questionnaires assessing the subjective effects were administered to the subjects during each session before and after the smoking time period. THC, 11-hydroxy-THC (11-OH-THC) and 11-nor-9-carboxy-THC (THCCOOH) were analyzed in the blood by gas chromatography or liquid chromatography (LC)-tandem mass spectrometry (MS/MS). The determination of THC, THCCOOH, cannabinol (CBN), and Δ9-tetrahydrocannabinolic acid A (THC-A) was carried out on OF only using LC-MS/MS. In line with the widely accepted assumption that cannabis smoking results in a strong contamination of the oral cavity, we found that THC, and also THC-A, shows a sharp, high concentration peak just after smoking, with a rapid decrease in these levels within 3 h. No obvious differences were found between both groups concerning THC median maximum concentrations measured either in blood or in OF; these levels were equal to 1,338 and 1,041 μg/L in OF and to 82 and 94 μg/L in WB for occasional and heavy smokers, respectively. The initial WB THCCOOH concentration was much higher in regular smokers than in occasional users. Compared with the occasional smokers, the sensation of confusion felt by the regular smokers was much less while the feeling of intoxication remained almost unchanged. [Figure not available: see fulltext.] [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
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21. An unusual cerebral computed tomography image.
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Carron, Pierre-Nicolas, Cavassini, Mathias, Maeder, Philippe, and Hugli, Olivier William
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TOMOGRAPHY , *CEREBRAL cortex diseases - Abstract
A quiz concerning the unusual cerebral computed tomography image of a 28-year-old prison inmate with recurrent frontal headaches is presented.
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- 2010
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22. Guidelines for imaging retinoblastoma: imaging principles and MRI standardization.
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de Graaf P, Göricke S, Rodjan F, Galluzzi P, Maeder P, Castelijns JA, Brisse HJ, European Retinoblastoma Imaging Collaboration (ERIC), de Graaf, Pim, Göricke, Sophia, Rodjan, Firazia, Galluzzi, Paolo, Maeder, Philippe, Castelijns, Jonas A, and Brisse, Hervé J
- Abstract
Retinoblastoma is the most common intraocular tumor in children. The diagnosis is usually established by the ophthalmologist on the basis of fundoscopy and US. Together with US, high-resolution MRI has emerged as an important imaging modality for pretreatment assessment, i.e. for diagnostic confirmation, detection of local tumor extent, detection of associated developmental malformation of the brain and detection of associated intracranial primitive neuroectodermal tumor (trilateral retinoblastoma). Minimum requirements for pretreatment diagnostic evaluation of retinoblastoma or mimicking lesions are presented, based on consensus among members of the European Retinoblastoma Imaging Collaboration (ERIC). The most appropriate techniques for imaging in a child with leukocoria are reviewed. CT is no longer recommended. Implementation of a standardized MRI protocol for retinoblastoma in clinical practice may benefit children worldwide, especially those with hereditary retinoblastoma, since a decreased use of CT reduces the exposure to ionizing radiation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Guidelines for imaging retinoblastoma: imaging principles and MRI standardization.
- Author
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Graaf, Pim, Göricke, Sophia, Rodjan, Firazia, Galluzzi, Paolo, Maeder, Philippe, Castelijns, Jonas, and Brisse, Hervé
- Subjects
- *
RETINOBLASTOMA , *TUMORS in children , *OPHTHALMOLOGISTS , *OPHTHALMOSCOPY , *MAGNETIC resonance imaging , *PATIENTS - Abstract
Retinoblastoma is the most common intraocular tumor in children. The diagnosis is usually established by the ophthalmologist on the basis of fundoscopy and US. Together with US, high-resolution MRI has emerged as an important imaging modality for pretreatment assessment, i.e. for diagnostic confirmation, detection of local tumor extent, detection of associated developmental malformation of the brain and detection of associated intracranial primitive neuroectodermal tumor (trilateral retinoblastoma). Minimum requirements for pretreatment diagnostic evaluation of retinoblastoma or mimicking lesions are presented, based on consensus among members of the European Retinoblastoma Imaging Collaboration (ERIC). The most appropriate techniques for imaging in a child with leukocoria are reviewed. CT is no longer recommended. Implementation of a standardized MRI protocol for retinoblastoma in clinical practice may benefit children worldwide, especially those with hereditary retinoblastoma, since a decreased use of CT reduces the exposure to ionizing radiation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Acute aphasia after right hemisphere stroke.
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Dewarrat, Géraldine M., Annoni, Jean-Marie, Fornari, Eleonora, Carota, Antonio, Bogousslavsky, Julien, and Maeder, Philippe
- Subjects
- *
APHASIA , *CEREBROVASCULAR disease , *CEREBRAL hemispheres , *TOMOGRAPHY , *MAGNETIC resonance imaging - Abstract
Right hemispheric stroke aphasia (RHSA) rarely occurs in right- or left-handed patients with their language representation in right hemisphere (RH). For right-handers, the term crossed aphasia is used. Single cases, multiple cases reports, and reviews suggest more variable anatomo-clinical correlations. We included retrospectively from our stroke data bank 16 patients (right- and left-handed, and ambidextrous) with aphasia after a single first-ever ischemic RH stroke. A control group was composed of 25 successive patients with left hemispheric stroke and aphasia (LHSA). For each patient, we analyzed four modalities of language (spontaneous fluency, naming, repetition, and comprehension) and recorded eventual impairment: (1) on admission (hyperacute) and (2) between day 3 and 14 (acute). Lesion volume and location as measured on computed tomography (CT) and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) were transformed into Talairach stereotaxic space. Nonparametric statistics were used to compare impaired/nonimpaired patients. Comprehension and repetition were less frequently impaired after RHSA (respectively, 56% and 50%) than after LHSA (respectively, 84% and 80%, P = 0.05 and 0.04) only at hyperacute phase. Among RHSA, fewer left-handers/ambidextrous than right-handers had comprehension disorders at second evaluation ( P = 0.013). Mean infarct size was similar in RHSA and LHSA with less posterior RHSA lesions (caudal to the posterior commissure). Comprehension and repetition impairments were more often associated with anterior lesions in RHSA (Fisher’s exact test, P < 0.05). Despite the small size of the cohort, our findings suggest increased atypical anatomo-functional correlations of RH language representation, particularly in non-right-handed patients. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. fMRI responses in medial frontal cortex that depend on the temporal frequency of visual input.
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Srinivasan, Ramesh, Fornari, Eleonora, Knyazeva, Maria G., Meuli, Reto, and Maeder, Philippe
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- *
ELECTROPHYSIOLOGY , *NEUROLOGY , *PHYSIOLOGY , *CEREBRAL cortex , *BRAIN - Abstract
Functional networks in the human brain have been investigated using electrophysiological methods (EEG/MEG, LFP, and MUA) and steady-state paradigms that apply periodic luminance or contrast modulation to drive cortical networks. We have used this approach with fMRI to characterize a cortical network driven by a checkerboard reversing at a fixed frequency. We found that the fMRI signals in voxels located in occipital cortex were increased by checkerboard reversal at frequencies ranging from 3 to 14 Hz. In contrast, the response of a cluster of voxels centered on basal medial frontal cortex depended strongly on the reversal frequency, consistently exhibiting a peak in the response for specific reversal frequencies between 3 and 5 Hz in each subject. The fMRI signals at the frontal voxels were positively correlated indicating a homogeneous cluster. Some of the occipital voxels were positively correlated to the frontal voxels apparently forming a large-scale functional network. Other occipital voxels were negatively correlated to the frontal voxels, suggesting a functionally distinct network. The results provide preliminary fMRI evidence that during visual stimulation, input frequency can be varied to engage different functional networks. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Sporadic Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease.
- Author
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Russmann, Heike, Vingerhoets, Francois, Miklossy, Judith, Maeder, Philippe, Glatzel, Markus, Aguzzi, Adriano, and Bogousslavsky, Julien
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- *
CREUTZFELDT-Jakob disease , *CENTRAL nervous system diseases , *PATHOLOGY , *MAGNETIC resonance imaging , *MEDICAL radiology - Abstract
To investigate a possible relationship between the severity of pathological and radiological lesions in diffusion-weighted MRI (DWI) we compared DWI findings from 6 sequential brain MRI scans with pathological features of numerous tissue blocks of different cortical and subcortical regions in a case of autopsy-proven sporadic CJD. Whereas DWI and pathological examination revealed multifocal, cortical and deep hyperintensities at corresponding localizations, no correlation between the degree of severity of radiologically visible and pathological damage was found.The characteristic focal involvement and extension of lesions of the cortex and the basal ganglia bilaterally shown by DWI may be an argument for the spreading of the disease per contiguitatem. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
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27. Comparison of MRI-based automated segmentation methods and functional neurosurgery targeting with direct visualization of the Ventro-intermediate thalamic nucleus at 7T.
- Author
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Najdenovska, Elena, Tuleasca, Constantin, Jorge, João, Maeder, Philippe, Marques, José P., Roine, Timo, Gallichan, Daniel, Thiran, Jean-Philippe, Levivier, Marc, and Bach Cuadra, Meritxell
- Abstract
The ventro-intermediate nucleus (Vim), as part of the motor thalamic nuclei, is a commonly used target in functional stereotactic neurosurgery for treatment of drug-resistant tremor. As it cannot be directly visualized on routinely used magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), its clinical targeting is performed using indirect methods. Recent literature suggests that the Vim can be directly visualized on susceptibility-weighted imaging (SWI) acquired at 7 T. Our work aims to assess the distinguishable Vim on 7 T SWI in both healthy-population and patients and, using it as a reference, to compare it with: (1) The clinical targeting, (2) The automated parcellation of thalamic subparts based on 3 T diffusion MRI (dMRI), and (3) The multi-atlas segmentation techniques. In 95.2% of the data, the manual outline was adjacent to the inferior lateral border of the dMRI-based motor-nuclei group, while in 77.8% of the involved cases, its ventral part enclosed the Guiot points. Moreover, the late MRI signature in the patients was always observed in the anterior part of the manual delineation and it overlapped with the multi-atlas outline. Overall, our study provides new insight on Vim discrimination through MRI and imply novel strategies for its automated segmentation, thereby opening new perspectives for standardizing the clinical targeting. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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