J Korean Soc Magn Reson Med.  2006 Jun;10(1):8-15.

MR Findings of Hypoxic Brain Damage: Relation to Time Elapse and Prognosis of Patients

Affiliations
  • 1Department of Radiology, Dankook University College of Medicine, Korea.
  • 2Department of Radiology, Asan Medical Center, University of Ulsan College of Medicine, Korea. sjkimjb@amc.seoul.kr

Abstract

PURPOSE: To describe MR imaging features of hypoxic brain damage in relation to time elapse and prog-nosis of patients.
MATERIALS AND METHODS
We reviewed 19 MR studies of 18 patients with hypoxic brain damage. MR imaging studies were performed between 1 to 20 days after the hypoxic insults (mean 8.6 days). MR images were analyzed with regard to the locations of abnormal signal intensities, the presence of brain edema. And imaging findings were correlated with the time elapse after the insults and the prognosis of patients.
RESULTS
On 19 cases of MR studies, abnormal high intensities on T2-weighted images were found in the basal ganglia (15, 78.9%), cerebral cortex (13, 68.4%), white matter (9, 47.4%), thalamus (6, 31.6%), cerebellum (4, 21.1%) and brainstem (1, 5.3%), respectively. Cerebral cortical involvement was typically bilateral and diffuse, but sometimes limited to the parieto-occipital area. The brainstem and cerebellar involvement was rare and in all cases, cerebral cortical lesions accompanied. Most of the white matter lesions were accompanied with cortical and deep gray matter lesions and found in subacute period(>6 days). The cortical high signal intensity lesions on T1-weighted image were found mostly in subacute stage, but in some cases involvement was also found in acute stage (< or =6 days). The cortical edema is found on 11 cases in acute and subacute stages. In cases of recovered consciousness, cortical involvement and edema on MR were rare.
CONCLUSION
MR findings of hypoxic brain damage were various, but diffuse bilateral involvement of cortex and/or deep gray matter was found in most of the cases. White matter involvement was rarely found in acute stage and usually found in subacute stage. In cases of good pronosis, cortical involvement and edema were rare.

Keyword

MR; Brain; Hypoxia

MeSH Terms

Anoxia
Basal Ganglia
Brain
Brain Edema
Brain Stem
Cerebellum
Cerebral Cortex
Consciousness
Edema
Humans
Hypoxia, Brain*
Magnetic Resonance Imaging
Prognosis*
Thalamus
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