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Some of the next articles are maybe not open access.

White matter lactate – Does it matter?

Neuroscience, 2014
About half of the human brain is white matter, characterized by axons covered in myelin, which facilitates the high speed of nerve signals from one brain area to another. At the time of myelination, the oligodendrocytes that synthesize myelin require a large amount of energy for this task.
Rinholm, J E, Bergersen, Linda Hildegard
openaire   +3 more sources

Impact of white matter hyperintensities on surrounding white matter tracts

Neuroradiology, 2018
It is unclear how white matter hyperintensities disrupt surrounding white matter tracts. The aim of this tractography study was to determine the spatial relationship between diffusion characteristics along white matter tracts and the distance from white matter hyperintensities.Diffusion tensor 3-T MRI scans were acquired in 29 participants with white ...
Adrian Crawley   +7 more
openaire   +3 more sources

A mysterious white matter lesion [PDF]

open access: possibleActa Neurologica Belgica, 2019
White matter diseases come with a huge number of differential diagnosis. Diagnostic work up in patients with white matter disease is primarily based on neuroradiological findings. Sometimes those findings could mislead a clinician to the wrong diagnosis and hence to unnecessarily diagnostic procedures.
Ivana Markovic, Silvio Basic
openaire   +3 more sources

White Matter's the Matter

Science, 2003
Scientists have long known that connections somehow go awry in the brains of people with schizophrenia. Now advances in imaging and gene technology are allowing them to trace the axons that connect from neuron to neuron and make up the brain9s white matter.
openaire   +2 more sources

Neurogenetics: white matter matters

Trends in Neurosciences, 2002
A group of inherited syndromes characterized by progressive muscle atrophy and sensory dysfunction, collectively referred to as Charcot–Marie–Tooth disease (CMT), has proven to be a hotbed for the identification of novel genetic mutations. CMT syndromes are unusually common (affecting one in every 2200 people), can be dominant, recessive or X-linked ...
openaire   +3 more sources

Imaging of White Matter Lesions

Cerebrovascular Diseases, 2002
Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) is very sensitive for the detection of white matter lesions (WML), which occur even in normal ageing. Intrinsic WML should be separated from physiological changes in the ageing brain, such as periventricular caps and bands, and from dilated Virchow-Robin spaces.
Barkhof, Frederik, Scheltens, Philip
openaire   +4 more sources

White matter pathology in phenylketonuria☆

Molecular Genetics and Metabolism, 2010
Early-treated phenylketonuria (PKU) is associated with a range of neuropsychological impairments. Proposed mechanisms for these impairments include dopamine depletion and white matter pathology. Neuroimaging studies demonstrate high-signal intensity in the periventricular white matter in most PKU patients, which can extend into subcortical and frontal ...
P. J. Anderson, LEUZZI, Vincenzo
openaire   +4 more sources

Vanishing white matter

"Vanishing white matter" (VWM) is a leukodystrophy caused by autosomal recessive pathogenic variants in the genes encoding the subunits of eukaryotic initiation factor 2B (eIF2B). Disease onset and disease course are extremely variable. Onset varies from the antenatal period until senescence. The age of onset is predictive of disease severity.
van der Knaap, Marjo S.   +2 more
openaire   +3 more sources

White Matter Connectivity

2014
The applications of diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) have increased considerably among both normal and diverse neuropsychiatric populations in recent years. In this chapter, the authors examine the contributions of DTI in identifying profiles of trait-specific connectivity in several groups defined in terms of gender, age, handedness, and general ...
Foteini Christidi   +3 more
openaire   +2 more sources

White Matter Diseases with Radiologic-Pathologic Correlation.

Radiographics, 2016
White matter diseases include a wide spectrum of disorders that have in common impairment of normal myelination, either by secondary destruction of previously myelinated structures (demyelinating processes) or by primary abnormalities of myelin formation
N. Sârbu   +5 more
semanticscholar   +1 more source

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