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Contribution of computerized tomography and nuclear magnetic resonance to the diagnosis of vascular dementia

Abstract

Nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) and computerized tomography (CT) have become indispensable to the exploration of patients with vascular dementia. NMR is remarkable for its innocuity, its anatomical accuracy, its sensitivity and the three-dimensional approach it offers. CT is less sensitive, but the examinations are shorter and less costly. These two techniques seem to be about equally effective in visualizing multiple infarcts, although NMR gives a better contrast. In dementia due to multiple infarcts, the bilateral cortical and subcortical lesions coexist with moderate cortical atrophy. The cerebral lacunae of lacunar dementia are better visualized by NMR; they are distributed on both sides, predominate in the frontal lobes and only produce slight cortical atrophy, less pronounced than ventricular dilatation. The main advantage of NMR is its high sensitivity in detecting early changes in the white matter, changes which are particularly perceptible in juxta- and peri-ventricular areas in arteriosclerous subcortical leucoencephalopathy. NMR, not very specific here, does not readily separate these lesions from those of other types of leucoencephalopathy. The finding of hypodense areas at CT or hypersignals at NMR (T2) around the ventricles may help in differentiating between vascular dementia, irrespective of its mechanism, and primary dementia.
Publication Date:
Jun 18, 1987
Product Type:
Conference
Report Number:
CONF-8610348-
Reference Number:
FRD-87-003107; EDB-88-003267
Resource Relation:
Journal Name: Presse Med.; (France); Journal Volume: 16:23; Conference: 2. international symposium on cerebral ischemia and Alzheimer disease, Madrid, Spain, 3 Oct 1986
Subject:
62 RADIOLOGY AND NUCLEAR MEDICINE; 59 BASIC BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES; BRAIN; COMPUTERIZED TOMOGRAPHY; NMR IMAGING; MENTAL DISORDERS; DIAGNOSIS; ISCHEMIA; NERVOUS SYSTEM DISEASES; PATIENTS; BODY; CARDIOVASCULAR DISEASES; CENTRAL NERVOUS SYSTEM; DIAGNOSTIC TECHNIQUES; DISEASES; NERVOUS SYSTEM; ORGANS; TOMOGRAPHY; VASCULAR DISEASES; 550601* - Medicine- Unsealed Radionuclides in Diagnostics; 550101 - Behavioral Biology- Tracer Techniques
OSTI ID:
5823059
Research Organizations:
Centre Hospitalier Saint Philibert, 59 - Lomme, France; Hopital B., 59 - Lille, France
Country of Origin:
France
Language:
French
Other Identifying Numbers:
Journal ID: CODEN: PRMEA
Submitting Site:
FRN
Size:
Pages: 1151-1153
Announcement Date:
May 13, 2001

Citation Formats

Gallois, P, and Pruvo, J P. Contribution of computerized tomography and nuclear magnetic resonance to the diagnosis of vascular dementia. France: N. p., 1987. Web.
Gallois, P, & Pruvo, J P. Contribution of computerized tomography and nuclear magnetic resonance to the diagnosis of vascular dementia. France.
Gallois, P, and Pruvo, J P. 1987. "Contribution of computerized tomography and nuclear magnetic resonance to the diagnosis of vascular dementia." France.
@misc{etde_5823059,
title = {Contribution of computerized tomography and nuclear magnetic resonance to the diagnosis of vascular dementia}
author = {Gallois, P, and Pruvo, J P}
abstractNote = {Nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) and computerized tomography (CT) have become indispensable to the exploration of patients with vascular dementia. NMR is remarkable for its innocuity, its anatomical accuracy, its sensitivity and the three-dimensional approach it offers. CT is less sensitive, but the examinations are shorter and less costly. These two techniques seem to be about equally effective in visualizing multiple infarcts, although NMR gives a better contrast. In dementia due to multiple infarcts, the bilateral cortical and subcortical lesions coexist with moderate cortical atrophy. The cerebral lacunae of lacunar dementia are better visualized by NMR; they are distributed on both sides, predominate in the frontal lobes and only produce slight cortical atrophy, less pronounced than ventricular dilatation. The main advantage of NMR is its high sensitivity in detecting early changes in the white matter, changes which are particularly perceptible in juxta- and peri-ventricular areas in arteriosclerous subcortical leucoencephalopathy. NMR, not very specific here, does not readily separate these lesions from those of other types of leucoencephalopathy. The finding of hypodense areas at CT or hypersignals at NMR (T2) around the ventricles may help in differentiating between vascular dementia, irrespective of its mechanism, and primary dementia.}
journal = []
volume = {16:23}
place = {France}
year = {1987}
month = {Jun}
}