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Research ArticlePEDIATRICS

Normal Myelination of the Pediatric Brain Imaged with Fluid-Attenuated Inversion-Recovery (FLAIR)MR Imaging

James W. Murakami, Ed Weinberger and Dennis W. W. Shaw
American Journal of Neuroradiology September 1999, 20 (8) 1406-1411;
James W. Murakami
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Ed Weinberger
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Dennis W. W. Shaw
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Abstract

BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: As in adult imaging, FLAIR can be applied to pediatric brain imaging, and this requires an appreciation of the normal pediatric brain appearance by FLAIR imaging. The purpose of this study was to describe the MR appearance of the brain in normal infants and young children as demonstrated by fluid-attenuated inversion-recovery (FLAIR) MR imaging.

METHODS: We retrospectively examined MR brain studies, interpreted as normal by pediatric radiologists, from 29 patients (aged 1 to 42 months) to catalog the appearance of myelination in multiple brain areas.

RESULTS: On T2-weighted images, white matter progressed from hyperintense to hypointense relative to adjacent gray matter over the first 2 years of life. An analogous, although slightly delayed sequence was observed on FLAIR images with the exception of the deep cerebral hemispheric white matter, which followed a triphasic sequence of development. On FLAIR images, the deep cerebral white matter was heterogeneously hypointense relative to gray matter in the young infant, became hyperintense early in the first few months of life, and then reverted to hypointense during the second year of life.

CONCLUSION: The normal appearance and development of brain white matter must be taken into account when interpreting FLAIR images of infants and young children.

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American Journal of Neuroradiology
Vol. 20, Issue 8
1 Sep 1999
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Normal Myelination of the Pediatric Brain Imaged with Fluid-Attenuated Inversion-Recovery (FLAIR)MR Imaging
James W. Murakami, Ed Weinberger, Dennis W. W. Shaw
American Journal of Neuroradiology Sep 1999, 20 (8) 1406-1411;

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Normal Myelination of the Pediatric Brain Imaged with Fluid-Attenuated Inversion-Recovery (FLAIR)MR Imaging
James W. Murakami, Ed Weinberger, Dennis W. W. Shaw
American Journal of Neuroradiology Sep 1999, 20 (8) 1406-1411;
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  • Effectiveness of 3D T2-Weighted FLAIR FSE Sequences with Fat Suppression for Detection of Brain MR Imaging Signal Changes in Children
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  • Comparison of Spin-Echo and Gradient-Echo T1-Weighted and Spin-Echo T2-Weighted Images at 3T in Evaluating Term-Neonatal Myelination
  • Relative Decrease in Signal Intensity of Subcortical White Matter in Spontaneous Intracranial Hypotension on Fluid-Attenuated Inversion Recovery Images
  • Normal Findings on Brain Fluid-Attenuated Inversion Recovery MR Images at 3T
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