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The British Journal of Radiology, Vol 73, Issue 867 256-265, Copyright © 2000 by British Institute of Radiology
ARTICLES |
A Coulthard, SC Blank, K Bushby, RN Kalaria and DJ Burn
Department of Radiology, Royal Victoria Infirmary, Newcastle upon Tyne, UK.
Cerebral autosomal dominant arteriopathy with subcortical infarcts and leukoencephalopathy (CADASIL) is a rare, inherited cause of early stroke and dementia, with a poor prognosis. This study was performed to clarify lesion appearance and pattern of lesion distribution in CADASIL. 20 members of a single family were tested for the CADASIL gene mutation and studied with cranial MRI. Scans were evaluated for lesion load and pattern of lesion distribution. 19 patients had cranial MRI, of whom 11 had normal MRI scans, were clinically unaffected and tested negative for the CADASIL gene mutation. The remaining eight patients had abnormal cranial MRI scans: seven patients were positive for the CADASIL gene mutation and one (untested) patient was severely clinically affected. Three of the patients who tested positive for the CADASIL gene mutation were clinically unaffected at the time of imaging. All eight patients with abnormal cranial MRI had subcortical white matter abnormalities, mostly in frontal and temporal lobes. Lesions involving the corpus callosum were present on sagittal T2 weighted images in four of five clinically affected and one of three clinically unaffected patients. Lesions involving the deep grey nuclei and the brain stem were common. On T1 weighted images, lesions were either poorly defined (confluent white matter hypointensity) or well defined (cystic infarcts or enlarged perivascular spaces). Atrophy was infrequent. Familiarity with the range of cranial MRI appearances may aid diagnosis of CADASIL. Recognition of cranial imaging features in asymptomatic CADASIL patients could prompt earlier diagnosis.
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