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1.
Neurol Sci ; 2024 May 09.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38724752

Cerebellar mutism syndrome (CMS) is a frequent complication of surgical intervention on posterior fossa in children. It has been only occasionally reported in adults and its features have not been fully characterized. In children and in young adults, medulloblastoma is the main reason for neurosurgery. A single case of postsurgical CMS is presented in an adult patient with a cerebellar hemorrhage and a systematic review of the published individual cases of CMS in adults was done. Literature review of individual cases found 30 patients, 18/30 (60%) males, from 20 to 71 years at diagnosis. All but one case was post-surgical, but in one of the post-surgical cases iatrogenic basilar artery occlusion was proposed as cause for CMS. The causes were: primary tumors of the posterior fossa in 16/22 (72.7%) metastasis in 3/30 (10%), ischemia in 3/30 (10%) cerebellar hemorrhage in 3/30 (10%), and benign lesions in 2/30 (6.7%) patients. 8/30 patients (26.7%) were reported as having persistent or incomplete resolution of CMS within 12 months. CMS is a rare occurrence in adults and spontaneous cerebellar hemorrhage has been reported in 3/30 (10%) adult patients. The generally accepted hypothesis is that CMS results from bilateral damage to the dentate nucleus or the dentate-rubro-thalamic tract, leading to cerebro-cerebellar diaschisis. Several causes might contribute in adults. The prognosis of CMS is slightly worse in adults than in children, but two thirds of cases show a complete resolution within 6 months.

2.
Neurol Sci ; 2024 May 06.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38709382

INTRODUCTION: Calcified arterial cerebral embolism is a rare occurrence among large and medium vessel occlusions causing ischemic stroke and its diagnosis and treatment is a challenge. The sources of calcified embolism might be a calcific atheroma from the aortic arch and carotid artery, but also heart valve disease has been reported in the literature. Calcified embolism is frequently simultaneous on multiple vascular territories. The prognosis of patients is usually poor, including patients treated by using endovascular thrombectomy (EVT) and this diagnosis could be easily missed in the acute phase. In addition, the optimal secondary prevention has not been yet fully stated. METHODS: We are presenting two cases of acute stroke due to calcified embolism in the middle cerebral artery (MCA) coming from a complicated carotid atheroma, non-stenosing in the first case (a 49 years old man) and stenosing in the second case (a 71 years old man) without clinical indications to intravenous thrombolysis and/or EVT, extensively investigated in the acute phase and followed-up for over 12 months with a favorable clinical course and the persisting steno-occlusion in the involved MCA. In both cases, antiplatelet treatment and targeting of vascular risk factors were done without recurrences in the follow-up period. DISCUSSION: Cerebral calcified embolism has been reported in 5.9% of cases of acute ischemic stroke in a single center series and only in 1.2% of a large retrospective cohort of EVT-treated patients. In both series the prognosis was poor and only one third of EVT-treated patients had functional independence at 3-months follow-up. The natural history of these subtype of ischemic stroke is relatively poorly understood and both etiological diagnosis and treatment have not yet defined. It is possible that some cases might be underdiagnosed and underreported. CONCLUSIONS: Calcified cerebral embolism is a rare cause of stroke, but it is largely underreported and both acute phase and secondary preventive treatment have to be defined.

3.
Eur Stroke J ; : 23969873241247745, 2024 Apr 16.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38627943

INTRODUCTION: It is unclear which patients with non-traumatic (spontaneous) intracerebral haemorrhage (ICH) are at risk of developing acute symptomatic seizures (provoked seizures occurring within the first week after stroke onset; early seizures, ES) and whether ES predispose to the occurrence of remote symptomatic seizures (unprovoked seizures occurring more than 1 week after stroke; post-stroke epilepsy, PSE) and long-term mortality. PATIENTS AND METHODS: In the setting of the Multicenter Study on Cerebral Haemorrhage in Italy (MUCH-Italy) we examined the risk of ES and whether they predict the occurrence of PSE and all-cause mortality in a cohort of patients with first-ever spontaneous ICH and no previous history of epilepsy, consecutively hospitalized in 12 Italian neurological centers from 2002 to 2014. RESULTS: Among 2570 patients (mean age, 73.4 ± 12.5 years; males, 55.4%) 228 (8.9%) had acute ES (183 (7.1%) short seizures and 45 (1.8%) status epilepticus (SE)). Lobar location of the hematoma (OR, 1.49; 95% CI, 1.06-2.08) was independently associated with the occurrence of ES. Of the 2,037 patients who were followed-up (median follow-up time, 68.0 months (25th-75th percentile, 77.0)), 155 (7.6%) developed PSE. ES (aHR, 2.34; 95% CI, 1.42-3.85), especially when presenting as short seizures (aHR, 2.35; 95% CI, 1.38-4.00) were associated to PSE occurrence. Unlike short seizures, SE was an independent predictor of all-cause mortality (aHR, 1.50; 95% CI, 1.005-2.26). DISCUSSION AND CONCLUSION: The long-term risk of PSE and death after an ICH vary according to ES subtype. This might have implications for the design of future clinical trials targeting post-ICH epileptic seizures.

5.
J Clin Med ; 13(7)2024 Mar 28.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38610734

Secondary neurodegeneration refers to the final result of several simultaneous and sequential mechanisms leading to the loss of substance and function in brain regions connected to the site of a primary injury. Stroke is one of the most frequent primary injuries. Among the subtypes of post-stroke secondary neurodegeneration, axonal degeneration of the corticospinal tract, also known as Wallerian degeneration, is the most known, and it directly impacts motor functions, which is crucial for the motor outcome. The timing of its appearance in imaging studies is usually considered late (over 4 weeks), but some diffusion-based magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) techniques, as diffusion tensor imaging (DTI), might show alterations as early as within 7 days from the stroke. The different sequential pathological stages of secondary neurodegeneration provide an interpretation of the signal changes seen by MRI in accordance with the underlying mechanisms of axonal necrosis and repair. Depending on the employed MRI technique and on the timing of imaging, different rates and thresholds of Wallerian degeneration have been provided in the literature. In fact, three main pathological stages of Wallerian degeneration are recognizable-acute, subacute and chronic-and MRI might show different changes: respectively, hyperintensity on T2-weighted sequences with corresponding diffusion restriction (14-20 days after the injury), followed by transient hypointensity of the tract on T2-weighted sequences, and by hyperintensity and atrophy of the tract on T2-weighted sequences. This is the main reason why this review is focused on MRI signal changes underlying Wallerian degeneration. The identification of secondary neurodegeneration, and in particular Wallerian degeneration, has been proposed as a prognostic indicator for motor outcome after stroke. In this review, the main mechanisms and neuroimaging features of Wallerian degeneration in adults are addressed, focusing on the time and mechanisms of tissue damage underlying the signal changes in MRI.

6.
Diagnostics (Basel) ; 14(6)2024 Mar 14.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38535038

Primary Angiitis of the Central Nervous System (PACNS) is a rare disease and its diagnosis is a challenge for several reasons, including the lack of specificity of the main findings highlighted in the current diagnostic criteria. Among the neuroimaging pattern of PACNS, a tumefactive form (t-PACNS) is a rare subtype and its differential diagnosis mainly relies on neuroimaging. Tumor-like mass lesions in the brain are a heterogeneous category including tumors (in particular, primary brain tumors such as glial tumors and lymphoma), inflammatory (e.g., t-PACNS, tumefactive demyelinating lesions, and neurosarcoidosis), and infectious diseases (e.g., neurotoxoplasmosis). In this review, the main features of t-PACNS are addressed and the main differential diagnoses from a neuroimaging perspective (mainly Magnetic Resonance Imaging-MRI-techniques) are described, including conventional and advanced MRI.

7.
J Clin Med ; 13(6)2024 Mar 15.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38541922

(1) Background: Non-stenotic complicated plaques are a neglected cause of stroke, in particular in young patients. Atherosclerosis has some preferential sites in extracranial arteries and the prepetrous segment of the internal carotid artery has been rarely described as site of atheroma in general and of complicated atheroma in stroke patients. The aim of this study is to describe the rate of the prepetrous internal carotid artery's (ICA) involvement in a single-center case series of young stroke patients. (2) Methods: All patients < 50 years old with acute ischemic stroke admitted to a single-center Stroke Unit during two time periods (the first one from 1 January 2018 to 31 December 2019, and the second one from 1 January 2021 to 30 June 2022), were prospectively investigated as part of a screening protocol of the Searching for Explanations for Cryptogenic Stroke in the Young: Revealing the Etiology, Triggers, and Outcome (SECRETO) study [ClinicalTrials.gov ID NCT01934725], including extracranial vascular examination by using computed tomography (CT) or magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). (3) Results: Two out of ninety-three consecutive patients (2.15%) had a complicated atheroma in the prepetrous ICA as the cause of stroke and both CT angiography and high-resolution vessel wall MRI were applied to document the main features of positive remodeling, cap rupture, ulceration, intraplaque hemorrhage, and a transient thrombus superimposed on the atheroma. The two patients had a different evolution of healing in the first case and a persisting ulceration at 12 months in the second case. (4) Conclusions: The prepetrous ICA is a rarely described location of complicated atheroma in stroke patients at all ages and it represents roughly 2% of causes of acute stroke in this single-center case series in young people.

8.
Biomedicines ; 12(2)2024 Feb 19.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38398061

Primary Angiitis of the Central Nervous System (PACNS) is a rare cerebrovascular disease involving the arteries of the leptomeninges, brain and spinal cord. Its diagnosis can be challenging, and the current diagnostic criteria show several limitations. Among the clinical and neuroimaging manifestations of PACNS, intracranial bleeding, particularly intracerebral hemorrhage (ICH), is poorly described in the available literature, and it is considered infrequent. This review aims to summarize the available data addressing this issue with a dedicated focus on the clinical, neuroradiological and neuropathological perspectives. Moreover, the limitations of the actual data and the unanswered questions about hemorrhagic PACNS are addressed from a double point of view (PACNS subtyping and ICH etiology). Fewer than 20% of patients diagnosed as PACNS had an ICH during the course of the disease, and in cases where ICH was reported, it usually did not occur at presentation. As trigger factors, both sympathomimetic drugs and illicit drugs have been proposed, under the hypothesis of an inflammatory response due to vasoconstriction in the distal cerebral arteries. Most neuroradiological descriptions documented a lobar location, and both the large-vessel PACNS (LV-PACNS) and small-vessel PACNS (SV-PACNS) subtypes might be the underlying associated phenotypes. Surprisingly, amyloid beta deposition was not associated with ICH when histopathology was available. Moreover, PACNS is not explicitly included in the etiological classification of spontaneous ICH. This issue has received little attention in the past, and it could be addressed in future prospective studies.

9.
Stroke ; 55(3): 634-642, 2024 Mar.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38299371

BACKGROUND: The identification of patients surviving an acute intracerebral hemorrhage who are at a long-term risk of arterial thrombosis is a poorly defined, crucial issue for clinicians. METHODS: In the setting of the MUCH-Italy (Multicenter Study on Cerebral Haemorrhage in Italy) prospective observational cohort, we enrolled and followed up consecutive 30-day intracerebral hemorrhage survivors to assess the long-term incidence of arterial thrombotic events, to assess the impact of clinical and radiological variables on the risk of these events, and to develop a tool for estimating such a risk at the individual level. Primary end point was a composite of ischemic stroke, myocardial infarction, or other arterial thrombotic events. A point-scoring system was generated by the ß-coefficients of the variables independently associated with the long-term risk of arterial thrombosis, and the predictive MUCH score was calculated as the sum of the weighted scores. RESULTS: Overall, 1729 patients (median follow-up time, 43 months [25th to 75th percentile, 69.0]) qualified for inclusion. Arterial thrombotic events occurred in 169 (9.7%) patients. Male sex, diabetes, hypercholesterolemia, atrial fibrillation, and personal history of coronary artery disease were associated with increased long-term risk of arterial thrombosis, whereas the use of statins and antithrombotic medications after the acute intracerebral hemorrhage was associated with a reduced risk. The area under the receiver operating characteristic curve of the MUCH score predictive validity was 0.716 (95% CI, 0.56-0.81) for the 0- to 1-year score, 0.672 (95% CI, 0.58-0.73) for the 0- to 5-year score, and 0.744 (95% CI, 0.65-0.81) for the 0- to 10-year score. C statistic for the prediction of events that occur from 0 to 10 years was 0.69 (95% CI, 0.64-0.74). CONCLUSIONS: Intracerebral hemorrhage survivors are at high long-term risk of arterial thrombosis. The MUCH score may serve as a simple tool for risk estimation.


Atrial Fibrillation , Myocardial Infarction , Stroke , Thrombosis , Humans , Male , Atrial Fibrillation/complications , Cerebral Hemorrhage/diagnostic imaging , Cerebral Hemorrhage/epidemiology , Cerebral Hemorrhage/complications , Myocardial Infarction/complications , Risk Factors , Stroke/epidemiology , Thrombosis/etiology , Thrombosis/complications , Female
10.
World Neurosurg ; 183: e11-e21, 2024 Mar.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37806521

OBJECTIVES: Twig-like middle cerebral artery (MCA) is a rare anomaly where the M1 MCA is partially or completely replaced by a plexiform network. It has been described in angiographic series from Asian and South-American cohorts, but has not yet been reported in a European population. METHODS: The digital subtraction angiograms (DSAs) of adult patients referred to a single neurovascular center for a diagnostic hypothesis of moyamoya arteriopathy (MMA) from 2018 to 2023 were prospectively and retrospectively checked by experienced neuroradiologists for identifying patients with twig-like MCA. The angioarchitecture of twig-like MCA was systematically evaluated and described. RESULTS: Five of 30 (16.7%) male patients (mean age 55.8 + 14.7 years) of European ancestry were identified as having twig-like MCA. The clinical presentations were ischemic stroke (2 of 5), hemorrhagic stroke (1 of 5), and headache (2 of 5). All patients showed a unilateral involvement on DSA and in 1 of 5 (20%) an intracranial aneurysm was found. DSA was used to confirm the diagnosis of twig-like MCA and define the angioarchitecture and associated anomalies. An accessory MCA and recurrent artery of Heubner were found in 3 of 5 (60%) cases, feeding the network together with the anterior choroidal artery (4 of 5, 80%). CONCLUSIONS: Twig-like MCA is a rare vascular anomaly, but it seems to be less rare than expected among adult European patients with suspected MMA on noninvasive neuroimaging studies. DSA is fundamental for a reliable differential diagnosis and should not be omitted in these patients.


Intracranial Aneurysm , Moyamoya Disease , Adult , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Aged , Female , Middle Cerebral Artery/diagnostic imaging , Middle Cerebral Artery/abnormalities , Retrospective Studies , Cerebral Arteries , Carotid Artery, Internal , Cerebral Angiography
12.
Neurol Sci ; 45(3): 1249-1254, 2024 Mar.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38044394

INTRODUCTION: Posterior reversible encephalopathy syndrome (PRES) is a rare and complex disorder with variable clinical presentation and a typical magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) pattern of vasogenic edema with typical and atypical locations. It is often triggered by other diseases and drugs and the most prototypical association is with persistently elevated arterial pressure values. Among the potential cerebrovascular complications, intracranial bleeding has been described, but ischemic stroke is uncommonly reported. METHODS: We are presenting a case of a male patient with prolonged and sustained arterial hypertension acutely presenting with lacunar ischemic stroke involving the right corona radiata and composite MRI findings with the association of chronic small vessel disease (SVD) markers, acute symptomatic lacunar stroke, and atypical, central variant, posterior fossa dominant PRES. In the MRI follow-up, the white matter hyperintensities in T2-fluid attenuated inversion recovery (FLAIR sequences) due to PRES. DISCUSSION: The pathophysiology of PRES is not yet fully known, but the association with markedly increased values of arterial pressure is typical. In this context, ischemic stroke has not been considered in the clinical and neuroradiological manifestations of PRES and it has been only occasionally reported in the literature. In this case, the main hypothesis is that sustained hypertension may have triggered both manifestations, PRES, and ischemic stroke and the last one allowed to diagnose the first one. CONCLUSIONS: Atypical variants of PRES are not so rare and it may also occur in typical triggering situations. The association with ischemic stroke is even rarer and it may add some clues to the pathomechanisms of PRES.


Hypertension , Ischemic Stroke , Posterior Leukoencephalopathy Syndrome , Stroke, Lacunar , White Matter , Humans , Male , Posterior Leukoencephalopathy Syndrome/complications , Posterior Leukoencephalopathy Syndrome/diagnostic imaging , Ischemic Stroke/complications , Hypertension/complications , Magnetic Resonance Imaging/methods , Stroke, Lacunar/complications , Stroke, Lacunar/diagnostic imaging
14.
Biomedicines ; 11(10)2023 Sep 28.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37893037

Small vessel diseases (SVD) is an umbrella term including several entities affecting small arteries, arterioles, capillaries, and venules in the brain. One of the most relevant and prevalent SVDs is cerebral amyloid angiopathy (CAA), whose pathological hallmark is the deposition of amyloid fragments in the walls of small cortical and leptomeningeal vessels. CAA frequently coexists with Alzheimer's Disease (AD), and both are associated with cerebrovascular events, cognitive impairment, and dementia. CAA and AD share pathophysiological, histopathological and neuroimaging issues. The venular involvement in both diseases has been neglected, although both animal models and human histopathological studies found a deposition of amyloid beta in cortical venules. This review aimed to summarize the available information about venular involvement in CAA, starting from the biological level with the putative pathomechanisms of cerebral damage, passing through the definition of the peculiar angioarchitecture of the human cortex with the functional organization and consequences of cortical arteriolar and venular occlusion, and ending to the hypothesized links between cortical venular involvement and the main neuroimaging markers of the disease.

15.
Neurol Sci ; 44(11): 4099-4102, 2023 Nov.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37526798

INTRODUCTION: Secondary neurodegeneration after stroke is a complex phenomenon affecting remote and synaptically linked cerebral areas. The involvement of the substantia nigra in this process has been rarely described in infarcts involving the striatum. METHODS: We are presenting a case of ischemic stroke involving the right striatum due to atrial fibrillation and associated in a few days with the neuroimaging finding of hyperintensity of the ipsilateral substantia nigra and striatonigral tract on T2-fluid attenuated inversion recovery and diffusion-weighted imaging sequences of brain magnetic resonance imaging. This finding was not related to clinical manifestations and substantially disappeared within 3 months from stroke onset. DISCUSSION: The pathophysiology of secondary degeneration of the substantia nigra is poorly understood and it relies on animal models and autoptic studies. The main putative mechanism is not ischemic but excitotoxic with a different role of the internal and external globus pallidus and a different effect on the pars compacta and pars reticularis of the substantia nigra. In animal models, inflammatory mechanisms seem play a role only in the late phase. The main studies on humans were presented in detail. CONCLUSIONS: A better understanding of the secondary degeneration of the substantia nigra has the potentiality to offer a chance for neuroprotection in acute stroke, but further studies are needed.


Ischemic Stroke , Stroke , Humans , Corpus Striatum/pathology , Ischemic Stroke/pathology , Magnetic Resonance Imaging , Stroke/complications , Stroke/diagnostic imaging , Stroke/pathology , Substantia Nigra/diagnostic imaging , Substantia Nigra/pathology
16.
Diagnostics (Basel) ; 13(12)2023 Jun 08.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37370898

The pathophysiology of lacunar infarction is an evolving and debated field, where relevant information comes from histopathology, old anatomical studies and animal models. Only in the last years, have neuroimaging techniques allowed a sufficient resolution to directly or indirectly assess the dynamic evolution of small vessel occlusion and to formulate hypotheses about the tissue status and the mechanisms of damage. The core-penumbra concept was extensively explored in large vessel occlusions (LVOs) both from the experimental and clinical point of view. Then, the perfusion thresholds on one side and the neuroimaging techniques studying the perfusion of brain tissue were focused and optimized for LVOs. The presence of a perfusion deficit in the territory of a single small perforating artery was negated for years until the recent proposal of the existence of a perfusion defect in a subgroup of lacunar infarcts by using magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). This last finding opens pathophysiological hypotheses and triggers a neurovascular multidisciplinary reasoning about how to image this perfusion deficit in the acute phase in particular. The aim of this review is to summarize the pathophysiological issues and the application of the core-penumbra hypothesis to lacunar stroke.

17.
Diagnostics (Basel) ; 13(9)2023 Apr 27.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37174955

BACKGROUND: The main theory underlying the use of perfusion imaging in acute ischemic stroke is the presence of a hypoperfused volume of the brain downstream of an occluded artery. Indeed, the main purpose of perfusion imaging is to select patients for endovascular treatment. Computed Tomography Perfusion (CTP) is the more used technique because of its wide availability but lacunar infarcts are theoretically outside the purpose of CTP, and limited data are available about CTP performance in acute stroke patients with lacunar stroke. METHODS: We performed a systematic review searching in PubMed and EMBASE for CTP and lacunar stroke with a final selection of 14 papers, which were examined for data extraction and, in particular, CTP technical issues and sensitivity, specificity, PPV, and NPV values. RESULTS: A global cohort of 583 patients with lacunar stroke was identified, with a mean age ranging from 59.8 to 72 years and a female percentage ranging from 32 to 53.1%.CTP was performed with different technologies (16 to 320 rows), different post-processing software, and different maps. Sensitivity ranges from 0 to 62.5%, and specificity from 20 to 100%. CONCLUSIONS: CTP does not allow to reasonable exclude lacunar infarct if no perfusion deficit is found, but the pathophysiology of lacunar infarct is more complex than previously thought.

19.
JAMA Neurol ; 80(5): 530-531, 2023 05 01.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36912827

This case report describes a spontaneous dissection of the basilar artery in a 53-year-old man presenting with ischemic stroke.


Aortic Dissection , Intracranial Aneurysm , Humans , Basilar Artery/diagnostic imaging , Neuroimaging , Aortic Dissection/diagnostic imaging , Aortic Dissection/surgery
20.
J Clin Med ; 11(23)2022 Dec 04.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36498778

Acute onset quadriplegia with or without facial sparing is an extremely rare vascular syndrome, and the main focus of attention is on the cervical and upper thoracic spinal cord as the putative site of the damage. Quadriplegia has been occasionally reported in brainstem strokes within well-defined lesion patterns, but these reports have gained little attention so far because of the rarity of this clinical syndrome. The clinical, neuroanatomical and neuroimaging features of ischemic stroke locations associated with quadriplegia have been collected and reviewed in a pragmatical view, which includes a detailed description of the neurological signs associated with the damage of the pyramidal pathways. Two clinical examples have been added to raise practical suggestions in neurovascular practice. Ischemic stroke sites determining quadriplegia have some main well-defined midline locations in the brainstem, involving the pyramidal pathways of both sides in a single synchronous ischemic lesion in the medulla oblongata and in the pons. Several accompanying neurological signs have been described when the ischemic lesion involves tracts and nuclei other than the pyramidal pathways, and they can be useful as localizing clues. In some cases, the typical neuroimaging appearance of the ischemic lesion on Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) has been reported as being a "heart appearance sign". This last sign has been described in midbrain strokes too, but this location is not associated with quadriplegia. The main etiology is atherothrombosis involving the intradural segment of the vertebral artery (VA) and their perforating branches. Two clinical examples of these rare vascular syndromes have been chosen to support a pragmatical discussion about the management of these cases. A midline ischemic stroke in the brainstem is a very rare vascular syndrome, and the acute onset quadriplegia is a distinctive feature of it. The awareness of this cerebrovascular manifestation might help to recognize and treat these patients.

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