|
Radiology HomeDepartment OverviewFacultyResidencyFellowshipsNeuroradiologyRochester CommunityLinks |
|
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||
![]() |
|
| Figure 1: CT scan demonstrates an area of increased density in the left frontal lobe consistent with an acute hemorrhage (arrow). | |
|
![]() |
| Figure 2A&B: Diffusion-weighted MR images (A) shows the hemorrhagic lesion in the left frontal lobe (single arrow) and another area of abnormal signal intensity in the left parietal lobe (B) (arrow). | |
![]() |
|
| Figure 3A&B: Flair images demonstrate the hemorrhagic lesion with mixed signal intensity (arrows) as well microvascular disease in the periventricular white matter (arrowheads). | |
![]() |
![]() |
| Figure 4: T2-weighted image - notice that only the left frontal lobe lesion identified. | Figure 5: Gradient echo image demonstrates multiple punctate areas of decreased signal both left and right frontal lobes (arrows) |
Diagnosis: Intracerebral hemorrhage from amyloid angiopathy
Discussion:
Non-traumatic intracranial hemorrhage
constitutes approximately 20% of acute strokes [1]. The
causes are primarily hypertension but in older patients amyloid angiopathy
is another alternative etiology. The main differential for this condition
is hypertensive hemorrhage. The evidence of multiple prior small
hemorrhages
is strongly suggestive of amyloid angiopathy [2]. Hypertensive hemorrhage
is usually in the basal ganglia whereas hemorrhages from amyloid
angiopathies
are usually in the cortex or subcortical region. Other etiologies
are of course, vascular malformation, hemorrhagic neoplasm or in
younger
patients, drug abuse.
References:
|
|
||
©Copyright University of Rochester Medical Center, 1999-2006. Disclaimer. For questions or suggestions concerning the content of these pages, contact the URMC Webmaster.