Results 131 to 140 of about 1,049 (161)

A DWI study of the contralateral hemisphere in cerebral hemiatrophy

open access: yesJournal of the Neurological Sciences, 2016
Cerebral hemiatrophy (CHA) is a congenital or acquired loss of volume in one hemisphere of the brain. The MR findings of the affected hemisphere have been a subject of many studies, however, the contralateral hemisphere has not been investigated. There is, in fact, an integrity between two hemispheres of the brain through transverse connection fibers ...
Bilge Oztoprak   +2 more
exaly   +7 more sources
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CT findings with cerebral hemiatrophy

Neuroradiology, 1980
CT examination of 71 patients with cerebral hemiatrophy revealed dilatation of the ventricle and low density of the cortex of the involved side in all cases. Thickening of the calvarium and a shift of the midline were found in about half of the patients.
A, Danziger, H I, Price
exaly   +3 more sources

Cerebral Hemiatrophy and Schizophrenia

open access: yesBritish Journal of Psychiatry, 1994
BackgroundNeuroimaging of a treatment-resistant patient with schizophrenia revealed the existence of cerebral hemiatrophy. The association of schizophrenia with cerebral hemiatrophy has not previously been reported.ResultsNeuroimaging with X-ray computerised tomography showed marked reduction in the volume of the left cerebral hemisphere with secondary
B K, Puri, A D, Hall, S W, Lewis
openaire   +3 more sources

Acquired Cerebral Hemiatrophy: Idiopathic?

Journal of Neuroimaging, 2004
ABSTRACTThe authors report the case of a young man with acquired cerebral hemiatrophy that was progressive initially but stabilized after a few months. He did not have any seizure throughout the course of his illness. No definite cause was evident despite extensive investigations.
Neeraj Kumar, John D Port
exaly   +5 more sources

Computed tomographic findings in cerebral hemiatrophy

Neuroradiology, 1978
The clinical, plain skull radiographic, brain scan, and CT findings of four patients with cerebral hemiatrophy are described. CT scanning is the most innocuous and most sensitive diagnostic method available to confirm the clinical diagnosis when plain skull radiographic changes are not confirmatory.
K F Lee
exaly   +3 more sources

Clinico-radiological approach to cerebral hemiatrophy

Child's Nervous System, 2018
Cerebral hemiatrophy is an uncommon neuroimaging finding of diverse etiologies, conventionally classified into two broad categories: congenital and acquired. The authors propose an alternative pragmatic clinical approach to cerebral hemiatrophy, classifying its diverse etiologies into a single event insult such as an in utero stroke, or a progressive ...
Ai Peng Tan, Jeremy B Lin, Clement Yong
exaly   +3 more sources

Growing skull fracture in a patient with cerebral hemiatrophy

open access: yesPediatric Radiology, 1995
A growing skull fracture or leptomeningeal cyst most commonly occurs in children under the age of 3 years, and is extremely rare in adults. The reason for a growing skull fracture is usually a dural tear in association with the fracture. This paper presents an 18-year-old mentally retarded patient with cerebral hemiatrophy (Dyke-Davidoff-Masson ...
Sener, Rn, Sener R.N.
openaire   +4 more sources

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