5 results match your criteria: "Hennepin County and University of Minnesota Medical Centers[Affiliation]"
Eur J Radiol
March 2016
Hennepin County and University of Minnesota Medical Centers, Department of Radiology, Minneapolis, MN, USA.
Introduction: Microhemorrhages (MH's) in patients with acute hepatic encephalopathy (AHE) have scarcely been described. This study set out to assess if MH's occur in characteristic locations and frequency in patients with AHE superimposed on chronic liver failure, and to determine if such findings correlate with the clinical and MRI severity.
Materials And Methods: Over a 4.
Eur J Radiol
April 2015
Hennepin County and University of Minnesota Medical Centers, Department of Radiology, Minneapolis, MN, USA. Electronic address:
Objectives: To assess the accuracy and reliability of one vendor's (Vital Images, Toshiba Medical, Minnetonka, MN) automated CT perfusion (CTP) summary maps in identification and volume estimation of infarcted tissue in patients with acute middle cerebral artery (MCA) distribution infarcts.
Subjects And Methods: From 1085 CTP examinations over 5.5 years, 43 diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI)-positive patients were included who underwent both CTP and DWI <12 h after symptom onset, with another 43 age-matched patients as controls (DWI-negative).
AJR Am J Roentgenol
September 2013
Department of Radiology, Hennepin County and University of Minnesota Medical Centers, 701 Park Ave, Minneapolis, MN 55415, USA.
Objective: Although posterior reversible encephalopathy syndrome (PRES) typically involves cortical or subcortical edema of the cerebrum, only individual cases have been described of a variant involving the central brainstem and basal ganglia and lacking cortical and subcortical edema. We evaluated FLAIR and T2-weighted images of 124 patients with confirmed PRES to determine the incidence of this uncommon variant, which we refer to as the "central variant"; to determine which structures are involved in this variant; and to determine the associated causes.
Conclusion: We found that five of the 124 patients (4%) with PRES had MR findings consistent with the central variant-that is, either brainstem or basal ganglia involvement and a lack of cortical or subcortical edema of the cerebrum.
Acta Radiol
September 2008
Department of Radiology, Hennepin County and University of Minnesota Medical Centers, Minneapolis, Minnesota 55415, USA.
Background: Clear depiction of the ligamentum flavum on routine lumbar magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) is essential in accurately describing the extent of degenerative disease. In routine, noncontrast evaluations, focal fatty deposition or hemangiomas can be difficult to distinguish from malignant foci on fast spin-echo (FSE) T2-weighted images.
Purpose: To describe the use of T2* fast field echo (T2FFE) in combination with spectral presaturation inversion recovery (SPIR) fat suppression for noncontrast, routine lumbar spine outpatient MR imaging at 3.
AJNR Am J Neuroradiol
March 2008
Department of Radiology, Hennepin County and University of Minnesota Medical Centers, Minneapolis, MN 55415, USA.
Background And Purpose: Four-section multisection CT angiography (MSCTA) accurately detects aneurysms at or more than 4 mm but is less accurate for those less than 4 mm. Our purpose was to determine the accuracy of 64-section MSCTA (64MSCTA) in aneurysm detection versus combined digital subtraction angiography (DSA) and 3D rotational angiography (3DRA).
Materials And Methods: In a retrospective review of patients studied because of acute symptoms suspicious for arising from an intracranial aneurysm, 63 subjects were included who had undergone CT angiography (CTA).