Chinese Neurosurgical Journal (May 2018)

Cavernous brain malformations and their relation to black blood MRI in respect to vessel wall contrast enhancement

  • Athanasios K. Petridis,
  • Marian P. Suresh,
  • Jan F. Cornelius,
  • Richard Bostelmann,
  • Maxine Dibué-Adjei,
  • Lan Li,
  • Marcel A. Kamp,
  • Hans Jakob Steiger,
  • Bernd Turowski,
  • Rebecca May

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s41016-018-0116-9
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 4, no. 1
pp. 1 – 4

Abstract

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Abstract Background Inflammatory responses are implicated as crucial patho-mechanisms of vascular brain malformations. Inflammation is suggested to be a key contributor to aneurysm rupture; however it is unclear whether inflammation contributes similarly to bleeding of cerebral cavernous malformations (CCMs). Black blood MRI is a sequence which identifies inflammation in blood vessel walls and in the present study is used to detect inflammatory response in CCMs. Methods Fifteen patients with 17 CCMs treated in our department in 2017 were retrospectively analysed. All patients received black blood MRIs and the results were analysed in correlation with, size and bleeding of CCMs. Results Size and bleeding status of CCMs did not correlate with contrast enhancement in the CCM wall. One of 3 patients with bleeding displayed contrast enhancement in black blood MRI, whereas the others had non enhancing lesions. Because of the small number of cases a statistical analysis was not performed. Conclusion In this limited cohort, inflammatory reactions in CCMs could not be detected by black blood MRI suggesting that the level of inflammation is minimal in these lesions and those different patho-mechanisms play a more important role in the rupture of CCMs.

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