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Index by author

October 01, 2016; Volume 37,Issue 10
  • A
  • B
  • C
  • D
  • E
  • F
  • G
  • H
  • I
  • J
  • K
  • L
  • M
  • N
  • O
  • P
  • Q
  • R
  • S
  • T
  • U
  • V
  • W
  • X
  • Y
  • Z

A

  1. Agarwal, V.

    1. ADULT BRAIN
      Open Access
      Discordant Observation of Brain Injury by MRI and Malignant Electroencephalography Patterns in Comatose Survivors of Cardiac Arrest following Therapeutic Hypothermia
      J.M. Mettenburg, V. Agarwal, M. Baldwin and J.C. Rittenberger
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1787-1793; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4839
  2. Aiken, A.H.

    1. EDITOR'S CHOICEHEAD & NECK
      You have access
      Imaging Appearance of SMARCB1 (INI1)-Deficient Sinonasal Carcinoma: A Newly Described Sinonasal Malignancy
      D.R. Shatzkes, L.E. Ginsberg, M. Wong, A.H. Aiken, B.F. Branstetter, M.A. Michel and N. Aygun
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1925-1929; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4841

      SMARCB1 (INI1) is a tumor-suppressor gene that has been implicated in a growing number of malignancies involving multiple anatomic sites, including the kidneys, soft tissues, and the CNS (See OMIM *601607). The authors describe a case series of 17 patients collected from 6 different centers to give a comprehensive description of the appearance of these tumors on CT, MR, and PET/CT studies. SMARCB1 (INI1)-deficient sinonasal carcinoma should be included in the differential diagnosis of a central sinonasal mass demonstrating aggressive imaging features, particularly when there is associated calcification.

  3. Albuquerque, F.C.

    1. INTERVENTIONAL
      Open Access
      Computational Modeling of Venous Sinus Stenosis in Idiopathic Intracranial Hypertension
      M.R. Levitt, P.M. McGah, K. Moon, F.C. Albuquerque, C.G. McDougall, M.Y.S. Kalani, L.J. Kim and A. Aliseda
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1876-1882; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4826
  4. Aliseda, A.

    1. INTERVENTIONAL
      Open Access
      Computational Modeling of Venous Sinus Stenosis in Idiopathic Intracranial Hypertension
      M.R. Levitt, P.M. McGah, K. Moon, F.C. Albuquerque, C.G. McDougall, M.Y.S. Kalani, L.J. Kim and A. Aliseda
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1876-1882; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4826
  5. Alperin, N.

    1. SPINE
      You have access
      Automated Quantitation of Spinal CSF Volume and Measurement of Craniospinal CSF Redistribution following Lumbar Withdrawal in Idiopathic Intracranial Hypertension
      N. Alperin, A.M. Bagci, S.H. Lee and B.L. Lam
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1957-1963; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4837
  6. Amrhein, T.J.

    1. SPINE
      You have access
      CT Fluoroscopy–Guided Blood Patching of Ventral CSF Leaks by Direct Needle Placement in the Ventral Epidural Space Using a Transforaminal Approach
      T.J. Amrhein, N.T. Befera, L. Gray and P.G. Kranz
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1951-1956; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4842
  7. Anderson, C.D.

    1. ADULT BRAIN
      Open Access
      Effect of CTA Tube Current on Spot Sign Detection and Accuracy for Prediction of Intracerebral Hemorrhage Expansion
      A. Morotti, J.M. Romero, M.J. Jessel, H.B. Brouwers, R. Gupta, K. Schwab, A. Vashkevich, A. Ayres, C.D. Anderson, M.E. Gurol, A. Viswanathan, S.M. Greenberg, J. Rosand and J.N. Goldstein
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1781-1786; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4810
  8. Arakawa, S.

    1. EXTRACRANIAL VASCULAR
      You have access
      Clinical Significance of the Champagne Bottle Neck Sign in the Extracranial Carotid Arteries of Patients with Moyamoya Disease
      C. Yasuda, S. Arakawa, T. Shimogawa, Y. Kanazawa, T. Sayama, S. Haga and T. Morioka
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1898-1902; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4815
  9. Auger, C.

    1. ADULT BRAIN
      You have access
      Improved Automatic Detection of New T2 Lesions in Multiple Sclerosis Using Deformation Fields
      M. Cabezas, J.F. Corral, A. Oliver, Y. Díez, M. Tintoré, C. Auger, X. Montalban, X. Lladó, D. Pareto and À. Rovira
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1816-1823; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4829
  10. Aviv, R.I.

    1. ADULT BRAIN
      Open Access
      Regional Frontal Perfusion Deficits in Relapsing-Remitting Multiple Sclerosis with Cognitive Decline
      R. Vitorino, S.-P. Hojjat, C.G. Cantrell, A. Feinstein, L. Zhang, L. Lee, P. O'Connor, T.J. Carroll and R.I. Aviv
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1800-1807; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4824
  11. Aygun, N.

    1. HEAD & NECK
      You have access
      High-Resolution MRI Findings following Trigeminal Rhizotomy
      B.G. Northcutt, D.P. Seeburg, J. Shin, N. Aygun, D.A. Herzka, D. Theodros, C.R. Goodwin, C. Bettegowda, M. Lim and A.M. Blitz
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1920-1924; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4868
    2. EDITOR'S CHOICEHEAD & NECK
      You have access
      Imaging Appearance of SMARCB1 (INI1)-Deficient Sinonasal Carcinoma: A Newly Described Sinonasal Malignancy
      D.R. Shatzkes, L.E. Ginsberg, M. Wong, A.H. Aiken, B.F. Branstetter, M.A. Michel and N. Aygun
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1925-1929; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4841

      SMARCB1 (INI1) is a tumor-suppressor gene that has been implicated in a growing number of malignancies involving multiple anatomic sites, including the kidneys, soft tissues, and the CNS (See OMIM *601607). The authors describe a case series of 17 patients collected from 6 different centers to give a comprehensive description of the appearance of these tumors on CT, MR, and PET/CT studies. SMARCB1 (INI1)-deficient sinonasal carcinoma should be included in the differential diagnosis of a central sinonasal mass demonstrating aggressive imaging features, particularly when there is associated calcification.

  12. Ayres, A.

    1. ADULT BRAIN
      Open Access
      Effect of CTA Tube Current on Spot Sign Detection and Accuracy for Prediction of Intracerebral Hemorrhage Expansion
      A. Morotti, J.M. Romero, M.J. Jessel, H.B. Brouwers, R. Gupta, K. Schwab, A. Vashkevich, A. Ayres, C.D. Anderson, M.E. Gurol, A. Viswanathan, S.M. Greenberg, J. Rosand and J.N. Goldstein
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1781-1786; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4810

B

  1. Baba, S.

    1. ADULT BRAIN
      Open Access
      Shear Stiffness of 4 Common Intracranial Tumors Measured Using MR Elastography: Comparison with Intraoperative Consistency Grading
      N. Sakai, Y. Takehara, S. Yamashita, N. Ohishi, H. Kawaji, T. Sameshima, S. Baba, H. Sakahara and H. Namba
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1851-1859; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4832
  2. Baba, T.

    1. FELLOWS' JOURNAL CLUBADULT BRAIN
      Open Access
      High-Convexity Tightness Predicts the Shunt Response in Idiopathic Normal Pressure Hydrocephalus
      W. Narita, Y. Nishio, T. Baba, O. Iizuka, T. Ishihara, M. Matsuda, M. Iwasaki, T. Tominaga and E. Mori
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1831-1837; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4838

      Sixty patients with idiopathic normal pressure hydrocephalus underwent presurgical brain MR imaging and clinical evaluation before and 1 year after shunt surgery. The authors assessed the MR imaging features including Evans index, high-convexity tightness, Sylvian fissure dilation, callosal angle, focal enlargement of the cortical sulci, bumps in the lateral ventricular roof, and deep white matter and periventricular hyperintensities. Multiple linear regression analyses demonstrated that presurgical high-convexity tightness alone predicted the improvement of the clinical symptoms 1 year after surgery.

  3. Bagci, A.M.

    1. SPINE
      You have access
      Automated Quantitation of Spinal CSF Volume and Measurement of Craniospinal CSF Redistribution following Lumbar Withdrawal in Idiopathic Intracranial Hypertension
      N. Alperin, A.M. Bagci, S.H. Lee and B.L. Lam
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1957-1963; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4837
  4. Baldwin, M.

    1. ADULT BRAIN
      Open Access
      Discordant Observation of Brain Injury by MRI and Malignant Electroencephalography Patterns in Comatose Survivors of Cardiac Arrest following Therapeutic Hypothermia
      J.M. Mettenburg, V. Agarwal, M. Baldwin and J.C. Rittenberger
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1787-1793; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4839
  5. Bartolini, B.

    1. INTERVENTIONAL
      You have access
      A Direct Aspiration, First Pass Technique (ADAPT) versus Stent Retrievers for Acute Stroke Therapy: An Observational Comparative Study
      B. Lapergue, R. Blanc, P. Guedin, J.-P. Decroix, J. Labreuche, C. Preda, B. Bartolini, O. Coskun, H. Redjem, M. Mazighi, F. Bourdain, G. Rodesch and M. Piotin
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1860-1865; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4840
  6. Befera, N.T.

    1. SPINE
      You have access
      CT Fluoroscopy–Guided Blood Patching of Ventral CSF Leaks by Direct Needle Placement in the Ventral Epidural Space Using a Transforaminal Approach
      T.J. Amrhein, N.T. Befera, L. Gray and P.G. Kranz
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1951-1956; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4842
  7. Bettegowda, C.

    1. HEAD & NECK
      You have access
      High-Resolution MRI Findings following Trigeminal Rhizotomy
      B.G. Northcutt, D.P. Seeburg, J. Shin, N. Aygun, D.A. Herzka, D. Theodros, C.R. Goodwin, C. Bettegowda, M. Lim and A.M. Blitz
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1920-1924; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4868
  8. Bian, W.

    1. ADULT BRAIN
      Open Access
      In Vivo 7T MR Quantitative Susceptibility Mapping Reveals Opposite Susceptibility Contrast between Cortical and White Matter Lesions in Multiple Sclerosis
      W. Bian, E. Tranvinh, T. Tourdias, M. Han, T. Liu, Y. Wang, B. Rutt and M.M. Zeineh
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1808-1815; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4830
  9. Blanc, R.

    1. INTERVENTIONAL
      You have access
      A Direct Aspiration, First Pass Technique (ADAPT) versus Stent Retrievers for Acute Stroke Therapy: An Observational Comparative Study
      B. Lapergue, R. Blanc, P. Guedin, J.-P. Decroix, J. Labreuche, C. Preda, B. Bartolini, O. Coskun, H. Redjem, M. Mazighi, F. Bourdain, G. Rodesch and M. Piotin
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1860-1865; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4840
    2. EDITOR'S CHOICEINTERVENTIONAL
      You have access
      Ocular Signs Caused by Dural Arteriovenous Fistula without Involvement of the Cavernous Sinus: A Case Series with Review of the Literature
      T. Robert, D. Botta, R. Blanc, R. Fahed, G. Ciccio, S. Smajda, H. Redjem and M. Piotin
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1870-1875; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4831

      Ocular signs are unusual in the presentation of cranial dural arteriovenous fistulas in locations other than the cavernous sinus. Between 2000–2015, 13 patients met the inclusion criteria for this retrospective analysis. The most common signs were chemosis (61.5%), loss of visual acuity (38.5%), exophthalmia (38.5%), and ocular hypertension (7.7%). Dural arteriovenous fistulas presenting with ocular signs were classified into 4 types due to their pathologic mechanism (local venous reflux into the superior ophthalmic vein, massive venous engorgement of the cerebrum responsible for intracranial hypertension, compression of an oculomotor nerve by a venous dilation, or intraorbital fistula with drainage into the superior ophthalmic vein).

  10. Blitz, A.M.

    1. HEAD & NECK
      You have access
      High-Resolution MRI Findings following Trigeminal Rhizotomy
      B.G. Northcutt, D.P. Seeburg, J. Shin, N. Aygun, D.A. Herzka, D. Theodros, C.R. Goodwin, C. Bettegowda, M. Lim and A.M. Blitz
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1920-1924; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4868
  11. Boockvar, J.A.

    1. ADULT BRAIN
      Open Access
      Dynamic Susceptibility Contrast-Enhanced MR Perfusion Imaging in Assessing Recurrent Glioblastoma Response to Superselective Intra-Arterial Bevacizumab Therapy
      R. Singh, K. Kesavabhotla, S.A. Kishore, Z. Zhou, A.J. Tsiouris, C.G. Filippi, J.A. Boockvar and I. Kovanlikaya
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1838-1843; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4823
  12. Booth, T.N.

    1. PEDIATRICS
      You have access
      MR Imaging of the Cervical Spine in Nonaccidental Trauma: A Tertiary Institution Experience
      R. Jacob, M. Cox, K. Koral, C. Greenwell, Y. Xi, L. Vinson, K. Reeder, B. Weprin, R. Huang and T.N. Booth
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1944-1950; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4817
  13. Boto, J.

    1. You have access
      Synthetic MR Imaging Sequence in Daily Clinical Practice
      M.I. Vargas, J. Boto and B.M. Delatre
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) E68-E69; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4895
  14. Botta, D.

    1. EDITOR'S CHOICEINTERVENTIONAL
      You have access
      Ocular Signs Caused by Dural Arteriovenous Fistula without Involvement of the Cavernous Sinus: A Case Series with Review of the Literature
      T. Robert, D. Botta, R. Blanc, R. Fahed, G. Ciccio, S. Smajda, H. Redjem and M. Piotin
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1870-1875; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4831

      Ocular signs are unusual in the presentation of cranial dural arteriovenous fistulas in locations other than the cavernous sinus. Between 2000–2015, 13 patients met the inclusion criteria for this retrospective analysis. The most common signs were chemosis (61.5%), loss of visual acuity (38.5%), exophthalmia (38.5%), and ocular hypertension (7.7%). Dural arteriovenous fistulas presenting with ocular signs were classified into 4 types due to their pathologic mechanism (local venous reflux into the superior ophthalmic vein, massive venous engorgement of the cerebrum responsible for intracranial hypertension, compression of an oculomotor nerve by a venous dilation, or intraorbital fistula with drainage into the superior ophthalmic vein).

  15. Bourdain, F.

    1. INTERVENTIONAL
      You have access
      A Direct Aspiration, First Pass Technique (ADAPT) versus Stent Retrievers for Acute Stroke Therapy: An Observational Comparative Study
      B. Lapergue, R. Blanc, P. Guedin, J.-P. Decroix, J. Labreuche, C. Preda, B. Bartolini, O. Coskun, H. Redjem, M. Mazighi, F. Bourdain, G. Rodesch and M. Piotin
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1860-1865; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4840
  16. Branstetter, B.F.

    1. HEAD & NECK
      You have access
      The CT Prevalence of Arrested Pneumatization of the Sphenoid Sinus in Patients with Sickle Cell Disease
      A.V. Prabhu and B.F. Branstetter
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1916-1919; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4801
    2. EDITOR'S CHOICEHEAD & NECK
      You have access
      Imaging Appearance of SMARCB1 (INI1)-Deficient Sinonasal Carcinoma: A Newly Described Sinonasal Malignancy
      D.R. Shatzkes, L.E. Ginsberg, M. Wong, A.H. Aiken, B.F. Branstetter, M.A. Michel and N. Aygun
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1925-1929; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4841

      SMARCB1 (INI1) is a tumor-suppressor gene that has been implicated in a growing number of malignancies involving multiple anatomic sites, including the kidneys, soft tissues, and the CNS (See OMIM *601607). The authors describe a case series of 17 patients collected from 6 different centers to give a comprehensive description of the appearance of these tumors on CT, MR, and PET/CT studies. SMARCB1 (INI1)-deficient sinonasal carcinoma should be included in the differential diagnosis of a central sinonasal mass demonstrating aggressive imaging features, particularly when there is associated calcification.

  17. Brinjikji, W.

    1. FELLOWS' JOURNAL CLUBINTERVENTIONAL
      You have access
      Flow Diversion for Ophthalmic Artery Aneurysms
      A.M. Burrows, W. Brinjikji, R.C. Puffer, H. Cloft, D.F. Kallmes and G. Lanzino
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1866-1869; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4835

      This is a retrospective review of 48 patients with 50 carotid-ophthalmic aneurysms in which 44 patients with 46 aneurysms were treated with flow diversion from June 2009 to June 2015. There were no permanent adverse visual outcomes. There was 1 death due to late intraparenchymal hemorrhage (2.2%). Six-month angiography showed complete occlusion in 24 of 37 patients (64.9%), and 3-year angiography results showed occlusion in 24 of 25 patients (96%).

  18. Brouwers, H.B.

    1. ADULT BRAIN
      Open Access
      Effect of CTA Tube Current on Spot Sign Detection and Accuracy for Prediction of Intracerebral Hemorrhage Expansion
      A. Morotti, J.M. Romero, M.J. Jessel, H.B. Brouwers, R. Gupta, K. Schwab, A. Vashkevich, A. Ayres, C.D. Anderson, M.E. Gurol, A. Viswanathan, S.M. Greenberg, J. Rosand and J.N. Goldstein
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1781-1786; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4810
  19. Burrows, A.M.

    1. FELLOWS' JOURNAL CLUBINTERVENTIONAL
      You have access
      Flow Diversion for Ophthalmic Artery Aneurysms
      A.M. Burrows, W. Brinjikji, R.C. Puffer, H. Cloft, D.F. Kallmes and G. Lanzino
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1866-1869; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4835

      This is a retrospective review of 48 patients with 50 carotid-ophthalmic aneurysms in which 44 patients with 46 aneurysms were treated with flow diversion from June 2009 to June 2015. There were no permanent adverse visual outcomes. There was 1 death due to late intraparenchymal hemorrhage (2.2%). Six-month angiography showed complete occlusion in 24 of 37 patients (64.9%), and 3-year angiography results showed occlusion in 24 of 25 patients (96%).

C

  1. Caan, M.W.A.

    1. ADULT BRAIN
      Open Access
      White Matter Hyperintensity Volume and Cerebral Perfusion in Older Individuals with Hypertension Using Arterial Spin-Labeling
      J.W. van Dalen, H.J.M.M. Mutsaerts, A.J. Nederveen, H. Vrenken, M.D. Steenwijk, M.W.A. Caan, C.B.L.M. Majoie, W.A. van Gool and E. Richard
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1824-1830; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4828
  2. Cabezas, M.

    1. ADULT BRAIN
      You have access
      Improved Automatic Detection of New T2 Lesions in Multiple Sclerosis Using Deformation Fields
      M. Cabezas, J.F. Corral, A. Oliver, Y. Díez, M. Tintoré, C. Auger, X. Montalban, X. Lladó, D. Pareto and À. Rovira
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1816-1823; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4829
  3. Cantrell, C.G.

    1. ADULT BRAIN
      Open Access
      Regional Frontal Perfusion Deficits in Relapsing-Remitting Multiple Sclerosis with Cognitive Decline
      R. Vitorino, S.-P. Hojjat, C.G. Cantrell, A. Feinstein, L. Zhang, L. Lee, P. O'Connor, T.J. Carroll and R.I. Aviv
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1800-1807; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4824
  4. Cao, D.

    1. ADULT BRAIN
      You have access
      Differentiating Hemangioblastomas from Brain Metastases Using Diffusion-Weighted Imaging and Dynamic Susceptibility Contrast-Enhanced Perfusion-Weighted MR Imaging
      D. She, X. Yang, Z. Xing and D. Cao
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1844-1850; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4809
  5. Carroll, T.J.

    1. ADULT BRAIN
      Open Access
      Regional Frontal Perfusion Deficits in Relapsing-Remitting Multiple Sclerosis with Cognitive Decline
      R. Vitorino, S.-P. Hojjat, C.G. Cantrell, A. Feinstein, L. Zhang, L. Lee, P. O'Connor, T.J. Carroll and R.I. Aviv
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1800-1807; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4824
  6. Chang, F.-C.

    1. EXTRACRANIAL VASCULAR
      Open Access
      Intervention versus Aggressive Medical Therapy for Cognition in Severe Asymptomatic Carotid Stenosis
      C.-J. Lin, F.-C. Chang, K.-H. Chou, P.-C. Tu, Y.-H. Lee, C.-P. Lin, P.-N. Wang and I.-H. Lee
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1889-1897; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4798
    2. INTERVENTIONAL
      You have access
      Peritherapeutic Hemodynamic Changes of Carotid Stenting Evaluated with Quantitative DSA in Patients with Carotid Stenosis
      M.M.H. Teng, F.-C. Chang, C.-J. Lin, L. Chiang, J.-S. Hong and Y.-H. Kao
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1883-1888; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4813
  7. Chang, H.-C.

    1. HEAD & NECK
      You have access
      Evaluating Instantaneous Perfusion Responses of Parotid Glands to Gustatory Stimulation Using High-Temporal-Resolution Echo-Planar Diffusion-Weighted Imaging
      T.-W. Chiu, Y.-J. Liu, H.-C. Chang, Y.-H. Lee, J.-C. Lee, K. Hsu, C.-W. Wang, J.-M. Yang, H.-H. Hsu and C.-J. Juan
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1909-1915; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4852
  8. Chen, G.Z.

    1. FELLOWS' JOURNAL CLUBADULT BRAIN
      Open Access
      Cerebral CTA with Low Tube Voltage and Low Contrast Material Volume for Detection of Intracranial Aneurysms
      Q.Q. Ni, G.Z. Chen, U.J. Schoepf, M.A.J. Klitsie, C.N. De Cecco, C.S. Zhou, S. Luo, G.M. Lu and L.J. Zhang
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1774-1780; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4803

      A cohort of 204 patients were randomly divided into 2 groups. Patients in group A (n = 102) underwent 80-kVp CTA with 30 mL of contrast agent, while patients in group B (n = 102) underwent conventional CTA (120 kVp, 60 mL of contrast agent). With DSA as a reference standard, diagnostic accuracy on a per-aneurysm basis was 89.9% for group A and 93.9% for group B. The authors conclude that in detecting intracranial aneurysms, 80-kVp/30-mL contrast CTA provides the same diagnostic accuracy as conventional CTA with substantial radiation dose and contrast agent reduction.

  9. Chen, W.

    1. EDITOR'S CHOICEADULT BRAIN
      Open Access
      Magnetic Susceptibility from Quantitative Susceptibility Mapping Can Differentiate New Enhancing from Nonenhancing Multiple Sclerosis Lesions without Gadolinium Injection
      Y. Zhang, S.A. Gauthier, A. Gupta, L. Tu, J. Comunale, G.C.-Y. Chiang, W. Chen, C.A. Salustri, W. Zhu and Y. Wang
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1794-1799; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4856

      In 54 patients, new T2-weighted lesions were evaluated for enhancement on conventional T1-weighted imaging with gadolinium, and their susceptibility values were measured on quantitative susceptibility mapping. Eighty-six of 133 new lesions that were gadolinium-enhancing had relative susceptibility values significantly lower than those of nonenhancing lesions. Using susceptibility values to discriminate enhancing from nonenhancing lesions showed a sensitivity of 88.4% and specificity of 91.5%, with a cutoff value of 11.2 parts per billion for QSM.

  10. Chiang, G.C.-Y.

    1. EDITOR'S CHOICEADULT BRAIN
      Open Access
      Magnetic Susceptibility from Quantitative Susceptibility Mapping Can Differentiate New Enhancing from Nonenhancing Multiple Sclerosis Lesions without Gadolinium Injection
      Y. Zhang, S.A. Gauthier, A. Gupta, L. Tu, J. Comunale, G.C.-Y. Chiang, W. Chen, C.A. Salustri, W. Zhu and Y. Wang
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1794-1799; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4856

      In 54 patients, new T2-weighted lesions were evaluated for enhancement on conventional T1-weighted imaging with gadolinium, and their susceptibility values were measured on quantitative susceptibility mapping. Eighty-six of 133 new lesions that were gadolinium-enhancing had relative susceptibility values significantly lower than those of nonenhancing lesions. Using susceptibility values to discriminate enhancing from nonenhancing lesions showed a sensitivity of 88.4% and specificity of 91.5%, with a cutoff value of 11.2 parts per billion for QSM.

  11. Chiang, L.

    1. INTERVENTIONAL
      You have access
      Peritherapeutic Hemodynamic Changes of Carotid Stenting Evaluated with Quantitative DSA in Patients with Carotid Stenosis
      M.M.H. Teng, F.-C. Chang, C.-J. Lin, L. Chiang, J.-S. Hong and Y.-H. Kao
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1883-1888; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4813
  12. Chiu, T.-W.

    1. HEAD & NECK
      You have access
      Evaluating Instantaneous Perfusion Responses of Parotid Glands to Gustatory Stimulation Using High-Temporal-Resolution Echo-Planar Diffusion-Weighted Imaging
      T.-W. Chiu, Y.-J. Liu, H.-C. Chang, Y.-H. Lee, J.-C. Lee, K. Hsu, C.-W. Wang, J.-M. Yang, H.-H. Hsu and C.-J. Juan
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1909-1915; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4852
  13. Chou, K.-H.

    1. EXTRACRANIAL VASCULAR
      Open Access
      Intervention versus Aggressive Medical Therapy for Cognition in Severe Asymptomatic Carotid Stenosis
      C.-J. Lin, F.-C. Chang, K.-H. Chou, P.-C. Tu, Y.-H. Lee, C.-P. Lin, P.-N. Wang and I.-H. Lee
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1889-1897; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4798
  14. Ciccio, G.

    1. EDITOR'S CHOICEINTERVENTIONAL
      You have access
      Ocular Signs Caused by Dural Arteriovenous Fistula without Involvement of the Cavernous Sinus: A Case Series with Review of the Literature
      T. Robert, D. Botta, R. Blanc, R. Fahed, G. Ciccio, S. Smajda, H. Redjem and M. Piotin
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1870-1875; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4831

      Ocular signs are unusual in the presentation of cranial dural arteriovenous fistulas in locations other than the cavernous sinus. Between 2000–2015, 13 patients met the inclusion criteria for this retrospective analysis. The most common signs were chemosis (61.5%), loss of visual acuity (38.5%), exophthalmia (38.5%), and ocular hypertension (7.7%). Dural arteriovenous fistulas presenting with ocular signs were classified into 4 types due to their pathologic mechanism (local venous reflux into the superior ophthalmic vein, massive venous engorgement of the cerebrum responsible for intracranial hypertension, compression of an oculomotor nerve by a venous dilation, or intraorbital fistula with drainage into the superior ophthalmic vein).

  15. Clerk-Lamalice, O.

    1. PEDIATRICS
      Open Access
      MRI Evaluation of Non-Necrotic T2-Hyperintense Foci in Pediatric Diffuse Intrinsic Pontine Glioma
      O. Clerk-Lamalice, W.E. Reddick, X. Li, Y. Li, A. Edwards, J.O. Glass and Z. Patay
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1930-1937; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4814
  16. Cloft, H.

    1. FELLOWS' JOURNAL CLUBINTERVENTIONAL
      You have access
      Flow Diversion for Ophthalmic Artery Aneurysms
      A.M. Burrows, W. Brinjikji, R.C. Puffer, H. Cloft, D.F. Kallmes and G. Lanzino
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1866-1869; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4835

      This is a retrospective review of 48 patients with 50 carotid-ophthalmic aneurysms in which 44 patients with 46 aneurysms were treated with flow diversion from June 2009 to June 2015. There were no permanent adverse visual outcomes. There was 1 death due to late intraparenchymal hemorrhage (2.2%). Six-month angiography showed complete occlusion in 24 of 37 patients (64.9%), and 3-year angiography results showed occlusion in 24 of 25 patients (96%).

  17. Colina, M.

    1. You have access
      Comment on “SAPHO Syndrome: Imaging Findings of Vertebral Involvement”
      M. Colina
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) E65-E66; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4912
  18. Comunale, J.

    1. EDITOR'S CHOICEADULT BRAIN
      Open Access
      Magnetic Susceptibility from Quantitative Susceptibility Mapping Can Differentiate New Enhancing from Nonenhancing Multiple Sclerosis Lesions without Gadolinium Injection
      Y. Zhang, S.A. Gauthier, A. Gupta, L. Tu, J. Comunale, G.C.-Y. Chiang, W. Chen, C.A. Salustri, W. Zhu and Y. Wang
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1794-1799; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4856

      In 54 patients, new T2-weighted lesions were evaluated for enhancement on conventional T1-weighted imaging with gadolinium, and their susceptibility values were measured on quantitative susceptibility mapping. Eighty-six of 133 new lesions that were gadolinium-enhancing had relative susceptibility values significantly lower than those of nonenhancing lesions. Using susceptibility values to discriminate enhancing from nonenhancing lesions showed a sensitivity of 88.4% and specificity of 91.5%, with a cutoff value of 11.2 parts per billion for QSM.

  19. Corral, J.F.

    1. ADULT BRAIN
      You have access
      Improved Automatic Detection of New T2 Lesions in Multiple Sclerosis Using Deformation Fields
      M. Cabezas, J.F. Corral, A. Oliver, Y. Díez, M. Tintoré, C. Auger, X. Montalban, X. Lladó, D. Pareto and À. Rovira
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1816-1823; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4829
  20. Coskun, O.

    1. INTERVENTIONAL
      You have access
      A Direct Aspiration, First Pass Technique (ADAPT) versus Stent Retrievers for Acute Stroke Therapy: An Observational Comparative Study
      B. Lapergue, R. Blanc, P. Guedin, J.-P. Decroix, J. Labreuche, C. Preda, B. Bartolini, O. Coskun, H. Redjem, M. Mazighi, F. Bourdain, G. Rodesch and M. Piotin
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1860-1865; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4840
  21. Cox, M.

    1. PEDIATRICS
      You have access
      MR Imaging of the Cervical Spine in Nonaccidental Trauma: A Tertiary Institution Experience
      R. Jacob, M. Cox, K. Koral, C. Greenwell, Y. Xi, L. Vinson, K. Reeder, B. Weprin, R. Huang and T.N. Booth
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1944-1950; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4817

D

  1. De Cecco, C.N.

    1. FELLOWS' JOURNAL CLUBADULT BRAIN
      Open Access
      Cerebral CTA with Low Tube Voltage and Low Contrast Material Volume for Detection of Intracranial Aneurysms
      Q.Q. Ni, G.Z. Chen, U.J. Schoepf, M.A.J. Klitsie, C.N. De Cecco, C.S. Zhou, S. Luo, G.M. Lu and L.J. Zhang
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1774-1780; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4803

      A cohort of 204 patients were randomly divided into 2 groups. Patients in group A (n = 102) underwent 80-kVp CTA with 30 mL of contrast agent, while patients in group B (n = 102) underwent conventional CTA (120 kVp, 60 mL of contrast agent). With DSA as a reference standard, diagnostic accuracy on a per-aneurysm basis was 89.9% for group A and 93.9% for group B. The authors conclude that in detecting intracranial aneurysms, 80-kVp/30-mL contrast CTA provides the same diagnostic accuracy as conventional CTA with substantial radiation dose and contrast agent reduction.

  2. Decroix, J.-P.

    1. INTERVENTIONAL
      You have access
      A Direct Aspiration, First Pass Technique (ADAPT) versus Stent Retrievers for Acute Stroke Therapy: An Observational Comparative Study
      B. Lapergue, R. Blanc, P. Guedin, J.-P. Decroix, J. Labreuche, C. Preda, B. Bartolini, O. Coskun, H. Redjem, M. Mazighi, F. Bourdain, G. Rodesch and M. Piotin
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1860-1865; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4840
  3. Delatre, B.M.

    1. You have access
      Synthetic MR Imaging Sequence in Daily Clinical Practice
      M.I. Vargas, J. Boto and B.M. Delatre
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) E68-E69; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4895
  4. Díez, Y.

    1. ADULT BRAIN
      You have access
      Improved Automatic Detection of New T2 Lesions in Multiple Sclerosis Using Deformation Fields
      M. Cabezas, J.F. Corral, A. Oliver, Y. Díez, M. Tintoré, C. Auger, X. Montalban, X. Lladó, D. Pareto and À. Rovira
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1816-1823; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4829

E

  1. Edwards, A.

    1. PEDIATRICS
      Open Access
      MRI Evaluation of Non-Necrotic T2-Hyperintense Foci in Pediatric Diffuse Intrinsic Pontine Glioma
      O. Clerk-Lamalice, W.E. Reddick, X. Li, Y. Li, A. Edwards, J.O. Glass and Z. Patay
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1930-1937; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4814

F

  1. Fahed, R.

    1. EDITOR'S CHOICEINTERVENTIONAL
      You have access
      Ocular Signs Caused by Dural Arteriovenous Fistula without Involvement of the Cavernous Sinus: A Case Series with Review of the Literature
      T. Robert, D. Botta, R. Blanc, R. Fahed, G. Ciccio, S. Smajda, H. Redjem and M. Piotin
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1870-1875; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4831

      Ocular signs are unusual in the presentation of cranial dural arteriovenous fistulas in locations other than the cavernous sinus. Between 2000–2015, 13 patients met the inclusion criteria for this retrospective analysis. The most common signs were chemosis (61.5%), loss of visual acuity (38.5%), exophthalmia (38.5%), and ocular hypertension (7.7%). Dural arteriovenous fistulas presenting with ocular signs were classified into 4 types due to their pathologic mechanism (local venous reflux into the superior ophthalmic vein, massive venous engorgement of the cerebrum responsible for intracranial hypertension, compression of an oculomotor nerve by a venous dilation, or intraorbital fistula with drainage into the superior ophthalmic vein).

  2. Feinstein, A.

    1. ADULT BRAIN
      Open Access
      Regional Frontal Perfusion Deficits in Relapsing-Remitting Multiple Sclerosis with Cognitive Decline
      R. Vitorino, S.-P. Hojjat, C.G. Cantrell, A. Feinstein, L. Zhang, L. Lee, P. O'Connor, T.J. Carroll and R.I. Aviv
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1800-1807; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4824
  3. Ferré, J.-C.

    1. PEDIATRICS
      Open Access
      Brain Perfusion Imaging in Neonates: An Overview
      M. Proisy, S. Mitra, C. Uria-Avellana, M. Sokolska, N.J. Robertson, F. Le Jeune and J.-C. Ferré
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1766-1773; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4778
  4. Fiehler, J.

    1. PEDIATRICS
      Open Access
      Volumetric Description of Brain Atrophy in Neuronal Ceroid Lipofuscinosis 2: Supratentorial Gray Matter Shows Uniform Disease Progression
      U. Löbel, J. Sedlacik, M. Nickel, S. Lezius, J. Fiehler, I. Nestrasil, A. Kohlschütter and A. Schulz
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1938-1943; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4816
  5. Filippi, C.G.

    1. ADULT BRAIN
      Open Access
      Dynamic Susceptibility Contrast-Enhanced MR Perfusion Imaging in Assessing Recurrent Glioblastoma Response to Superselective Intra-Arterial Bevacizumab Therapy
      R. Singh, K. Kesavabhotla, S.A. Kishore, Z. Zhou, A.J. Tsiouris, C.G. Filippi, J.A. Boockvar and I. Kovanlikaya
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1838-1843; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4823

G

  1. Gauthier, S.A.

    1. EDITOR'S CHOICEADULT BRAIN
      Open Access
      Magnetic Susceptibility from Quantitative Susceptibility Mapping Can Differentiate New Enhancing from Nonenhancing Multiple Sclerosis Lesions without Gadolinium Injection
      Y. Zhang, S.A. Gauthier, A. Gupta, L. Tu, J. Comunale, G.C.-Y. Chiang, W. Chen, C.A. Salustri, W. Zhu and Y. Wang
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1794-1799; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4856

      In 54 patients, new T2-weighted lesions were evaluated for enhancement on conventional T1-weighted imaging with gadolinium, and their susceptibility values were measured on quantitative susceptibility mapping. Eighty-six of 133 new lesions that were gadolinium-enhancing had relative susceptibility values significantly lower than those of nonenhancing lesions. Using susceptibility values to discriminate enhancing from nonenhancing lesions showed a sensitivity of 88.4% and specificity of 91.5%, with a cutoff value of 11.2 parts per billion for QSM.

  2. Ginsberg, L.E.

    1. EDITOR'S CHOICEHEAD & NECK
      You have access
      Imaging Appearance of SMARCB1 (INI1)-Deficient Sinonasal Carcinoma: A Newly Described Sinonasal Malignancy
      D.R. Shatzkes, L.E. Ginsberg, M. Wong, A.H. Aiken, B.F. Branstetter, M.A. Michel and N. Aygun
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1925-1929; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4841

      SMARCB1 (INI1) is a tumor-suppressor gene that has been implicated in a growing number of malignancies involving multiple anatomic sites, including the kidneys, soft tissues, and the CNS (See OMIM *601607). The authors describe a case series of 17 patients collected from 6 different centers to give a comprehensive description of the appearance of these tumors on CT, MR, and PET/CT studies. SMARCB1 (INI1)-deficient sinonasal carcinoma should be included in the differential diagnosis of a central sinonasal mass demonstrating aggressive imaging features, particularly when there is associated calcification.

  3. Glass, J.O.

    1. PEDIATRICS
      Open Access
      MRI Evaluation of Non-Necrotic T2-Hyperintense Foci in Pediatric Diffuse Intrinsic Pontine Glioma
      O. Clerk-Lamalice, W.E. Reddick, X. Li, Y. Li, A. Edwards, J.O. Glass and Z. Patay
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1930-1937; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4814
  4. Goldstein, J.N.

    1. You have access
      Reply:
      A. Morotti, J.M. Romero, R. Gupta and J.N. Goldstein
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) E64; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4887
    2. ADULT BRAIN
      Open Access
      Effect of CTA Tube Current on Spot Sign Detection and Accuracy for Prediction of Intracerebral Hemorrhage Expansion
      A. Morotti, J.M. Romero, M.J. Jessel, H.B. Brouwers, R. Gupta, K. Schwab, A. Vashkevich, A. Ayres, C.D. Anderson, M.E. Gurol, A. Viswanathan, S.M. Greenberg, J. Rosand and J.N. Goldstein
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1781-1786; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4810
  5. Goodwin, C.R.

    1. HEAD & NECK
      You have access
      High-Resolution MRI Findings following Trigeminal Rhizotomy
      B.G. Northcutt, D.P. Seeburg, J. Shin, N. Aygun, D.A. Herzka, D. Theodros, C.R. Goodwin, C. Bettegowda, M. Lim and A.M. Blitz
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1920-1924; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4868
  6. Granberg, T.

    1. You have access
      Reply:
      T. Granberg
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) E70; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4896
  7. Gray, L.

    1. SPINE
      You have access
      CT Fluoroscopy–Guided Blood Patching of Ventral CSF Leaks by Direct Needle Placement in the Ventral Epidural Space Using a Transforaminal Approach
      T.J. Amrhein, N.T. Befera, L. Gray and P.G. Kranz
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1951-1956; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4842
  8. Greenberg, S.M.

    1. ADULT BRAIN
      Open Access
      Effect of CTA Tube Current on Spot Sign Detection and Accuracy for Prediction of Intracerebral Hemorrhage Expansion
      A. Morotti, J.M. Romero, M.J. Jessel, H.B. Brouwers, R. Gupta, K. Schwab, A. Vashkevich, A. Ayres, C.D. Anderson, M.E. Gurol, A. Viswanathan, S.M. Greenberg, J. Rosand and J.N. Goldstein
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1781-1786; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4810
  9. Greenwell, C.

    1. PEDIATRICS
      You have access
      MR Imaging of the Cervical Spine in Nonaccidental Trauma: A Tertiary Institution Experience
      R. Jacob, M. Cox, K. Koral, C. Greenwell, Y. Xi, L. Vinson, K. Reeder, B. Weprin, R. Huang and T.N. Booth
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1944-1950; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4817
  10. Guedin, P.

    1. INTERVENTIONAL
      You have access
      A Direct Aspiration, First Pass Technique (ADAPT) versus Stent Retrievers for Acute Stroke Therapy: An Observational Comparative Study
      B. Lapergue, R. Blanc, P. Guedin, J.-P. Decroix, J. Labreuche, C. Preda, B. Bartolini, O. Coskun, H. Redjem, M. Mazighi, F. Bourdain, G. Rodesch and M. Piotin
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1860-1865; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4840
  11. Gupta, A.

    1. EDITOR'S CHOICEADULT BRAIN
      Open Access
      Magnetic Susceptibility from Quantitative Susceptibility Mapping Can Differentiate New Enhancing from Nonenhancing Multiple Sclerosis Lesions without Gadolinium Injection
      Y. Zhang, S.A. Gauthier, A. Gupta, L. Tu, J. Comunale, G.C.-Y. Chiang, W. Chen, C.A. Salustri, W. Zhu and Y. Wang
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1794-1799; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4856

      In 54 patients, new T2-weighted lesions were evaluated for enhancement on conventional T1-weighted imaging with gadolinium, and their susceptibility values were measured on quantitative susceptibility mapping. Eighty-six of 133 new lesions that were gadolinium-enhancing had relative susceptibility values significantly lower than those of nonenhancing lesions. Using susceptibility values to discriminate enhancing from nonenhancing lesions showed a sensitivity of 88.4% and specificity of 91.5%, with a cutoff value of 11.2 parts per billion for QSM.

  12. Gupta, R.

    1. You have access
      Reply:
      A. Morotti, J.M. Romero, R. Gupta and J.N. Goldstein
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) E64; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4887
    2. ADULT BRAIN
      Open Access
      Effect of CTA Tube Current on Spot Sign Detection and Accuracy for Prediction of Intracerebral Hemorrhage Expansion
      A. Morotti, J.M. Romero, M.J. Jessel, H.B. Brouwers, R. Gupta, K. Schwab, A. Vashkevich, A. Ayres, C.D. Anderson, M.E. Gurol, A. Viswanathan, S.M. Greenberg, J. Rosand and J.N. Goldstein
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1781-1786; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4810
  13. Gurol, M.E.

    1. ADULT BRAIN
      Open Access
      Effect of CTA Tube Current on Spot Sign Detection and Accuracy for Prediction of Intracerebral Hemorrhage Expansion
      A. Morotti, J.M. Romero, M.J. Jessel, H.B. Brouwers, R. Gupta, K. Schwab, A. Vashkevich, A. Ayres, C.D. Anderson, M.E. Gurol, A. Viswanathan, S.M. Greenberg, J. Rosand and J.N. Goldstein
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1781-1786; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4810

H

  1. Haga, S.

    1. EXTRACRANIAL VASCULAR
      You have access
      Clinical Significance of the Champagne Bottle Neck Sign in the Extracranial Carotid Arteries of Patients with Moyamoya Disease
      C. Yasuda, S. Arakawa, T. Shimogawa, Y. Kanazawa, T. Sayama, S. Haga and T. Morioka
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1898-1902; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4815
  2. Han, M.

    1. ADULT BRAIN
      Open Access
      In Vivo 7T MR Quantitative Susceptibility Mapping Reveals Opposite Susceptibility Contrast between Cortical and White Matter Lesions in Multiple Sclerosis
      W. Bian, E. Tranvinh, T. Tourdias, M. Han, T. Liu, Y. Wang, B. Rutt and M.M. Zeineh
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1808-1815; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4830
  3. Herzka, D.A.

    1. HEAD & NECK
      You have access
      High-Resolution MRI Findings following Trigeminal Rhizotomy
      B.G. Northcutt, D.P. Seeburg, J. Shin, N. Aygun, D.A. Herzka, D. Theodros, C.R. Goodwin, C. Bettegowda, M. Lim and A.M. Blitz
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1920-1924; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4868
  4. Hojjat, S.-P.

    1. ADULT BRAIN
      Open Access
      Regional Frontal Perfusion Deficits in Relapsing-Remitting Multiple Sclerosis with Cognitive Decline
      R. Vitorino, S.-P. Hojjat, C.G. Cantrell, A. Feinstein, L. Zhang, L. Lee, P. O'Connor, T.J. Carroll and R.I. Aviv
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1800-1807; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4824
  5. Hong, J.-S.

    1. INTERVENTIONAL
      You have access
      Peritherapeutic Hemodynamic Changes of Carotid Stenting Evaluated with Quantitative DSA in Patients with Carotid Stenosis
      M.M.H. Teng, F.-C. Chang, C.-J. Lin, L. Chiang, J.-S. Hong and Y.-H. Kao
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1883-1888; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4813
  6. Hsu, H.-H.

    1. HEAD & NECK
      You have access
      Evaluating Instantaneous Perfusion Responses of Parotid Glands to Gustatory Stimulation Using High-Temporal-Resolution Echo-Planar Diffusion-Weighted Imaging
      T.-W. Chiu, Y.-J. Liu, H.-C. Chang, Y.-H. Lee, J.-C. Lee, K. Hsu, C.-W. Wang, J.-M. Yang, H.-H. Hsu and C.-J. Juan
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1909-1915; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4852
  7. Hsu, K.

    1. HEAD & NECK
      You have access
      Evaluating Instantaneous Perfusion Responses of Parotid Glands to Gustatory Stimulation Using High-Temporal-Resolution Echo-Planar Diffusion-Weighted Imaging
      T.-W. Chiu, Y.-J. Liu, H.-C. Chang, Y.-H. Lee, J.-C. Lee, K. Hsu, C.-W. Wang, J.-M. Yang, H.-H. Hsu and C.-J. Juan
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1909-1915; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4852
  8. Huang, R.

    1. PEDIATRICS
      You have access
      MR Imaging of the Cervical Spine in Nonaccidental Trauma: A Tertiary Institution Experience
      R. Jacob, M. Cox, K. Koral, C. Greenwell, Y. Xi, L. Vinson, K. Reeder, B. Weprin, R. Huang and T.N. Booth
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1944-1950; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4817
  9. Huisman, T.A.G.M.

    1. You have access
      Neuroimaging Findings in Congenital Zika Syndrome
      A. Poretti and T.A.G.M. Huisman
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1764-1765; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4924

I

  1. Iizuka, O.

    1. FELLOWS' JOURNAL CLUBADULT BRAIN
      Open Access
      High-Convexity Tightness Predicts the Shunt Response in Idiopathic Normal Pressure Hydrocephalus
      W. Narita, Y. Nishio, T. Baba, O. Iizuka, T. Ishihara, M. Matsuda, M. Iwasaki, T. Tominaga and E. Mori
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1831-1837; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4838

      Sixty patients with idiopathic normal pressure hydrocephalus underwent presurgical brain MR imaging and clinical evaluation before and 1 year after shunt surgery. The authors assessed the MR imaging features including Evans index, high-convexity tightness, Sylvian fissure dilation, callosal angle, focal enlargement of the cortical sulci, bumps in the lateral ventricular roof, and deep white matter and periventricular hyperintensities. Multiple linear regression analyses demonstrated that presurgical high-convexity tightness alone predicted the improvement of the clinical symptoms 1 year after surgery.

  2. Ishihara, T.

    1. FELLOWS' JOURNAL CLUBADULT BRAIN
      Open Access
      High-Convexity Tightness Predicts the Shunt Response in Idiopathic Normal Pressure Hydrocephalus
      W. Narita, Y. Nishio, T. Baba, O. Iizuka, T. Ishihara, M. Matsuda, M. Iwasaki, T. Tominaga and E. Mori
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1831-1837; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4838

      Sixty patients with idiopathic normal pressure hydrocephalus underwent presurgical brain MR imaging and clinical evaluation before and 1 year after shunt surgery. The authors assessed the MR imaging features including Evans index, high-convexity tightness, Sylvian fissure dilation, callosal angle, focal enlargement of the cortical sulci, bumps in the lateral ventricular roof, and deep white matter and periventricular hyperintensities. Multiple linear regression analyses demonstrated that presurgical high-convexity tightness alone predicted the improvement of the clinical symptoms 1 year after surgery.

  3. Ishiyama, A.

    1. HEAD & NECK
      You have access
      Blood-Labyrinth Barrier Permeability in Menière Disease and Idiopathic Sudden Sensorineural Hearing Loss: Findings on Delayed Postcontrast 3D-FLAIR MRI
      M.N. Pakdaman, G. Ishiyama, A. Ishiyama, K.A. Peng, H.J. Kim, W.B. Pope and A.R. Sepahdari
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1903-1908; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4822
  4. Ishiyama, G.

    1. HEAD & NECK
      You have access
      Blood-Labyrinth Barrier Permeability in Menière Disease and Idiopathic Sudden Sensorineural Hearing Loss: Findings on Delayed Postcontrast 3D-FLAIR MRI
      M.N. Pakdaman, G. Ishiyama, A. Ishiyama, K.A. Peng, H.J. Kim, W.B. Pope and A.R. Sepahdari
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1903-1908; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4822
  5. Iwasaki, M.

    1. FELLOWS' JOURNAL CLUBADULT BRAIN
      Open Access
      High-Convexity Tightness Predicts the Shunt Response in Idiopathic Normal Pressure Hydrocephalus
      W. Narita, Y. Nishio, T. Baba, O. Iizuka, T. Ishihara, M. Matsuda, M. Iwasaki, T. Tominaga and E. Mori
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1831-1837; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4838

      Sixty patients with idiopathic normal pressure hydrocephalus underwent presurgical brain MR imaging and clinical evaluation before and 1 year after shunt surgery. The authors assessed the MR imaging features including Evans index, high-convexity tightness, Sylvian fissure dilation, callosal angle, focal enlargement of the cortical sulci, bumps in the lateral ventricular roof, and deep white matter and periventricular hyperintensities. Multiple linear regression analyses demonstrated that presurgical high-convexity tightness alone predicted the improvement of the clinical symptoms 1 year after surgery.

J

  1. Jacob, R.

    1. PEDIATRICS
      You have access
      MR Imaging of the Cervical Spine in Nonaccidental Trauma: A Tertiary Institution Experience
      R. Jacob, M. Cox, K. Koral, C. Greenwell, Y. Xi, L. Vinson, K. Reeder, B. Weprin, R. Huang and T.N. Booth
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1944-1950; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4817
  2. Jessel, M.J.

    1. ADULT BRAIN
      Open Access
      Effect of CTA Tube Current on Spot Sign Detection and Accuracy for Prediction of Intracerebral Hemorrhage Expansion
      A. Morotti, J.M. Romero, M.J. Jessel, H.B. Brouwers, R. Gupta, K. Schwab, A. Vashkevich, A. Ayres, C.D. Anderson, M.E. Gurol, A. Viswanathan, S.M. Greenberg, J. Rosand and J.N. Goldstein
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1781-1786; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4810
  3. Juan, C.-J.

    1. HEAD & NECK
      You have access
      Evaluating Instantaneous Perfusion Responses of Parotid Glands to Gustatory Stimulation Using High-Temporal-Resolution Echo-Planar Diffusion-Weighted Imaging
      T.-W. Chiu, Y.-J. Liu, H.-C. Chang, Y.-H. Lee, J.-C. Lee, K. Hsu, C.-W. Wang, J.-M. Yang, H.-H. Hsu and C.-J. Juan
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1909-1915; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4852

K

  1. Kalani, M.Y.S.

    1. INTERVENTIONAL
      Open Access
      Computational Modeling of Venous Sinus Stenosis in Idiopathic Intracranial Hypertension
      M.R. Levitt, P.M. McGah, K. Moon, F.C. Albuquerque, C.G. McDougall, M.Y.S. Kalani, L.J. Kim and A. Aliseda
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1876-1882; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4826
  2. Kallmes, D.F.

    1. FELLOWS' JOURNAL CLUBINTERVENTIONAL
      You have access
      Flow Diversion for Ophthalmic Artery Aneurysms
      A.M. Burrows, W. Brinjikji, R.C. Puffer, H. Cloft, D.F. Kallmes and G. Lanzino
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1866-1869; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4835

      This is a retrospective review of 48 patients with 50 carotid-ophthalmic aneurysms in which 44 patients with 46 aneurysms were treated with flow diversion from June 2009 to June 2015. There were no permanent adverse visual outcomes. There was 1 death due to late intraparenchymal hemorrhage (2.2%). Six-month angiography showed complete occlusion in 24 of 37 patients (64.9%), and 3-year angiography results showed occlusion in 24 of 25 patients (96%).

  3. Kanazawa, Y.

    1. EXTRACRANIAL VASCULAR
      You have access
      Clinical Significance of the Champagne Bottle Neck Sign in the Extracranial Carotid Arteries of Patients with Moyamoya Disease
      C. Yasuda, S. Arakawa, T. Shimogawa, Y. Kanazawa, T. Sayama, S. Haga and T. Morioka
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1898-1902; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4815
  4. Kao, Y.-H.

    1. INTERVENTIONAL
      You have access
      Peritherapeutic Hemodynamic Changes of Carotid Stenting Evaluated with Quantitative DSA in Patients with Carotid Stenosis
      M.M.H. Teng, F.-C. Chang, C.-J. Lin, L. Chiang, J.-S. Hong and Y.-H. Kao
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1883-1888; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4813
  5. Kawaji, H.

    1. ADULT BRAIN
      Open Access
      Shear Stiffness of 4 Common Intracranial Tumors Measured Using MR Elastography: Comparison with Intraoperative Consistency Grading
      N. Sakai, Y. Takehara, S. Yamashita, N. Ohishi, H. Kawaji, T. Sameshima, S. Baba, H. Sakahara and H. Namba
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1851-1859; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4832
  6. Kesavabhotla, K.

    1. ADULT BRAIN
      Open Access
      Dynamic Susceptibility Contrast-Enhanced MR Perfusion Imaging in Assessing Recurrent Glioblastoma Response to Superselective Intra-Arterial Bevacizumab Therapy
      R. Singh, K. Kesavabhotla, S.A. Kishore, Z. Zhou, A.J. Tsiouris, C.G. Filippi, J.A. Boockvar and I. Kovanlikaya
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1838-1843; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4823
  7. Kim, H.J.

    1. HEAD & NECK
      You have access
      Blood-Labyrinth Barrier Permeability in Menière Disease and Idiopathic Sudden Sensorineural Hearing Loss: Findings on Delayed Postcontrast 3D-FLAIR MRI
      M.N. Pakdaman, G. Ishiyama, A. Ishiyama, K.A. Peng, H.J. Kim, W.B. Pope and A.R. Sepahdari
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1903-1908; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4822
  8. Kim, L.J.

    1. INTERVENTIONAL
      Open Access
      Computational Modeling of Venous Sinus Stenosis in Idiopathic Intracranial Hypertension
      M.R. Levitt, P.M. McGah, K. Moon, F.C. Albuquerque, C.G. McDougall, M.Y.S. Kalani, L.J. Kim and A. Aliseda
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1876-1882; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4826
  9. Kishore, S.A.

    1. ADULT BRAIN
      Open Access
      Dynamic Susceptibility Contrast-Enhanced MR Perfusion Imaging in Assessing Recurrent Glioblastoma Response to Superselective Intra-Arterial Bevacizumab Therapy
      R. Singh, K. Kesavabhotla, S.A. Kishore, Z. Zhou, A.J. Tsiouris, C.G. Filippi, J.A. Boockvar and I. Kovanlikaya
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1838-1843; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4823
  10. Klitsie, M.A.J.

    1. FELLOWS' JOURNAL CLUBADULT BRAIN
      Open Access
      Cerebral CTA with Low Tube Voltage and Low Contrast Material Volume for Detection of Intracranial Aneurysms
      Q.Q. Ni, G.Z. Chen, U.J. Schoepf, M.A.J. Klitsie, C.N. De Cecco, C.S. Zhou, S. Luo, G.M. Lu and L.J. Zhang
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1774-1780; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4803

      A cohort of 204 patients were randomly divided into 2 groups. Patients in group A (n = 102) underwent 80-kVp CTA with 30 mL of contrast agent, while patients in group B (n = 102) underwent conventional CTA (120 kVp, 60 mL of contrast agent). With DSA as a reference standard, diagnostic accuracy on a per-aneurysm basis was 89.9% for group A and 93.9% for group B. The authors conclude that in detecting intracranial aneurysms, 80-kVp/30-mL contrast CTA provides the same diagnostic accuracy as conventional CTA with substantial radiation dose and contrast agent reduction.

  11. Kohlschütter, A.

    1. PEDIATRICS
      Open Access
      Volumetric Description of Brain Atrophy in Neuronal Ceroid Lipofuscinosis 2: Supratentorial Gray Matter Shows Uniform Disease Progression
      U. Löbel, J. Sedlacik, M. Nickel, S. Lezius, J. Fiehler, I. Nestrasil, A. Kohlschütter and A. Schulz
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1938-1943; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4816
  12. Koral, K.

    1. PEDIATRICS
      You have access
      MR Imaging of the Cervical Spine in Nonaccidental Trauma: A Tertiary Institution Experience
      R. Jacob, M. Cox, K. Koral, C. Greenwell, Y. Xi, L. Vinson, K. Reeder, B. Weprin, R. Huang and T.N. Booth
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1944-1950; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4817
  13. Kotsenas, A.L.

    1. You have access
      Reply:
      A.M. McGauvran and A.L. Kotsenas
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) E67; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4913
  14. Kovanlikaya, I.

    1. ADULT BRAIN
      Open Access
      Dynamic Susceptibility Contrast-Enhanced MR Perfusion Imaging in Assessing Recurrent Glioblastoma Response to Superselective Intra-Arterial Bevacizumab Therapy
      R. Singh, K. Kesavabhotla, S.A. Kishore, Z. Zhou, A.J. Tsiouris, C.G. Filippi, J.A. Boockvar and I. Kovanlikaya
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1838-1843; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4823
  15. Kranz, P.G.

    1. SPINE
      You have access
      CT Fluoroscopy–Guided Blood Patching of Ventral CSF Leaks by Direct Needle Placement in the Ventral Epidural Space Using a Transforaminal Approach
      T.J. Amrhein, N.T. Befera, L. Gray and P.G. Kranz
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1951-1956; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4842

L

  1. Labreuche, J.

    1. INTERVENTIONAL
      You have access
      A Direct Aspiration, First Pass Technique (ADAPT) versus Stent Retrievers for Acute Stroke Therapy: An Observational Comparative Study
      B. Lapergue, R. Blanc, P. Guedin, J.-P. Decroix, J. Labreuche, C. Preda, B. Bartolini, O. Coskun, H. Redjem, M. Mazighi, F. Bourdain, G. Rodesch and M. Piotin
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1860-1865; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4840
  2. Lam, B.L.

    1. SPINE
      You have access
      Automated Quantitation of Spinal CSF Volume and Measurement of Craniospinal CSF Redistribution following Lumbar Withdrawal in Idiopathic Intracranial Hypertension
      N. Alperin, A.M. Bagci, S.H. Lee and B.L. Lam
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1957-1963; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4837
  3. Lanzino, G.

    1. FELLOWS' JOURNAL CLUBINTERVENTIONAL
      You have access
      Flow Diversion for Ophthalmic Artery Aneurysms
      A.M. Burrows, W. Brinjikji, R.C. Puffer, H. Cloft, D.F. Kallmes and G. Lanzino
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1866-1869; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4835

      This is a retrospective review of 48 patients with 50 carotid-ophthalmic aneurysms in which 44 patients with 46 aneurysms were treated with flow diversion from June 2009 to June 2015. There were no permanent adverse visual outcomes. There was 1 death due to late intraparenchymal hemorrhage (2.2%). Six-month angiography showed complete occlusion in 24 of 37 patients (64.9%), and 3-year angiography results showed occlusion in 24 of 25 patients (96%).

  4. Lapergue, B.

    1. INTERVENTIONAL
      You have access
      A Direct Aspiration, First Pass Technique (ADAPT) versus Stent Retrievers for Acute Stroke Therapy: An Observational Comparative Study
      B. Lapergue, R. Blanc, P. Guedin, J.-P. Decroix, J. Labreuche, C. Preda, B. Bartolini, O. Coskun, H. Redjem, M. Mazighi, F. Bourdain, G. Rodesch and M. Piotin
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1860-1865; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4840
  5. Lee, I.-H.

    1. EXTRACRANIAL VASCULAR
      Open Access
      Intervention versus Aggressive Medical Therapy for Cognition in Severe Asymptomatic Carotid Stenosis
      C.-J. Lin, F.-C. Chang, K.-H. Chou, P.-C. Tu, Y.-H. Lee, C.-P. Lin, P.-N. Wang and I.-H. Lee
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1889-1897; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4798
  6. Lee, J.-C.

    1. HEAD & NECK
      You have access
      Evaluating Instantaneous Perfusion Responses of Parotid Glands to Gustatory Stimulation Using High-Temporal-Resolution Echo-Planar Diffusion-Weighted Imaging
      T.-W. Chiu, Y.-J. Liu, H.-C. Chang, Y.-H. Lee, J.-C. Lee, K. Hsu, C.-W. Wang, J.-M. Yang, H.-H. Hsu and C.-J. Juan
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1909-1915; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4852
  7. Lee, L.

    1. ADULT BRAIN
      Open Access
      Regional Frontal Perfusion Deficits in Relapsing-Remitting Multiple Sclerosis with Cognitive Decline
      R. Vitorino, S.-P. Hojjat, C.G. Cantrell, A. Feinstein, L. Zhang, L. Lee, P. O'Connor, T.J. Carroll and R.I. Aviv
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1800-1807; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4824
  8. Lee, S.H.

    1. SPINE
      You have access
      Automated Quantitation of Spinal CSF Volume and Measurement of Craniospinal CSF Redistribution following Lumbar Withdrawal in Idiopathic Intracranial Hypertension
      N. Alperin, A.M. Bagci, S.H. Lee and B.L. Lam
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1957-1963; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4837
  9. Lee, Y.-H.

    1. HEAD & NECK
      You have access
      Evaluating Instantaneous Perfusion Responses of Parotid Glands to Gustatory Stimulation Using High-Temporal-Resolution Echo-Planar Diffusion-Weighted Imaging
      T.-W. Chiu, Y.-J. Liu, H.-C. Chang, Y.-H. Lee, J.-C. Lee, K. Hsu, C.-W. Wang, J.-M. Yang, H.-H. Hsu and C.-J. Juan
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1909-1915; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4852
    2. EXTRACRANIAL VASCULAR
      Open Access
      Intervention versus Aggressive Medical Therapy for Cognition in Severe Asymptomatic Carotid Stenosis
      C.-J. Lin, F.-C. Chang, K.-H. Chou, P.-C. Tu, Y.-H. Lee, C.-P. Lin, P.-N. Wang and I.-H. Lee
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1889-1897; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4798
  10. Le Jeune, F.

    1. PEDIATRICS
      Open Access
      Brain Perfusion Imaging in Neonates: An Overview
      M. Proisy, S. Mitra, C. Uria-Avellana, M. Sokolska, N.J. Robertson, F. Le Jeune and J.-C. Ferré
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1766-1773; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4778
  11. Levitt, M.R.

    1. INTERVENTIONAL
      Open Access
      Computational Modeling of Venous Sinus Stenosis in Idiopathic Intracranial Hypertension
      M.R. Levitt, P.M. McGah, K. Moon, F.C. Albuquerque, C.G. McDougall, M.Y.S. Kalani, L.J. Kim and A. Aliseda
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1876-1882; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4826
  12. Lezius, S.

    1. PEDIATRICS
      Open Access
      Volumetric Description of Brain Atrophy in Neuronal Ceroid Lipofuscinosis 2: Supratentorial Gray Matter Shows Uniform Disease Progression
      U. Löbel, J. Sedlacik, M. Nickel, S. Lezius, J. Fiehler, I. Nestrasil, A. Kohlschütter and A. Schulz
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1938-1943; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4816
  13. Li, X.

    1. PEDIATRICS
      Open Access
      MRI Evaluation of Non-Necrotic T2-Hyperintense Foci in Pediatric Diffuse Intrinsic Pontine Glioma
      O. Clerk-Lamalice, W.E. Reddick, X. Li, Y. Li, A. Edwards, J.O. Glass and Z. Patay
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1930-1937; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4814
  14. Li, Y.

    1. PEDIATRICS
      Open Access
      MRI Evaluation of Non-Necrotic T2-Hyperintense Foci in Pediatric Diffuse Intrinsic Pontine Glioma
      O. Clerk-Lamalice, W.E. Reddick, X. Li, Y. Li, A. Edwards, J.O. Glass and Z. Patay
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1930-1937; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4814
  15. Lim, M.

    1. HEAD & NECK
      You have access
      High-Resolution MRI Findings following Trigeminal Rhizotomy
      B.G. Northcutt, D.P. Seeburg, J. Shin, N. Aygun, D.A. Herzka, D. Theodros, C.R. Goodwin, C. Bettegowda, M. Lim and A.M. Blitz
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1920-1924; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4868
  16. Lin, C.-J.

    1. EXTRACRANIAL VASCULAR
      Open Access
      Intervention versus Aggressive Medical Therapy for Cognition in Severe Asymptomatic Carotid Stenosis
      C.-J. Lin, F.-C. Chang, K.-H. Chou, P.-C. Tu, Y.-H. Lee, C.-P. Lin, P.-N. Wang and I.-H. Lee
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1889-1897; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4798
    2. INTERVENTIONAL
      You have access
      Peritherapeutic Hemodynamic Changes of Carotid Stenting Evaluated with Quantitative DSA in Patients with Carotid Stenosis
      M.M.H. Teng, F.-C. Chang, C.-J. Lin, L. Chiang, J.-S. Hong and Y.-H. Kao
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1883-1888; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4813
  17. Lin, C.-P.

    1. EXTRACRANIAL VASCULAR
      Open Access
      Intervention versus Aggressive Medical Therapy for Cognition in Severe Asymptomatic Carotid Stenosis
      C.-J. Lin, F.-C. Chang, K.-H. Chou, P.-C. Tu, Y.-H. Lee, C.-P. Lin, P.-N. Wang and I.-H. Lee
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1889-1897; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4798
  18. Liu, T.

    1. ADULT BRAIN
      Open Access
      In Vivo 7T MR Quantitative Susceptibility Mapping Reveals Opposite Susceptibility Contrast between Cortical and White Matter Lesions in Multiple Sclerosis
      W. Bian, E. Tranvinh, T. Tourdias, M. Han, T. Liu, Y. Wang, B. Rutt and M.M. Zeineh
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1808-1815; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4830
  19. Liu, Y.-J.

    1. HEAD & NECK
      You have access
      Evaluating Instantaneous Perfusion Responses of Parotid Glands to Gustatory Stimulation Using High-Temporal-Resolution Echo-Planar Diffusion-Weighted Imaging
      T.-W. Chiu, Y.-J. Liu, H.-C. Chang, Y.-H. Lee, J.-C. Lee, K. Hsu, C.-W. Wang, J.-M. Yang, H.-H. Hsu and C.-J. Juan
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1909-1915; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4852
  20. Lladó, X.

    1. ADULT BRAIN
      You have access
      Improved Automatic Detection of New T2 Lesions in Multiple Sclerosis Using Deformation Fields
      M. Cabezas, J.F. Corral, A. Oliver, Y. Díez, M. Tintoré, C. Auger, X. Montalban, X. Lladó, D. Pareto and À. Rovira
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1816-1823; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4829
  21. Löbel, U.

    1. PEDIATRICS
      Open Access
      Volumetric Description of Brain Atrophy in Neuronal Ceroid Lipofuscinosis 2: Supratentorial Gray Matter Shows Uniform Disease Progression
      U. Löbel, J. Sedlacik, M. Nickel, S. Lezius, J. Fiehler, I. Nestrasil, A. Kohlschütter and A. Schulz
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1938-1943; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4816
  22. Lovblad, K.

    1. You have access
      Dual-Energy CT and Spot Sign
      M.I. Vargas and K. Lovblad
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) E63; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4894
  23. Lu, G.M.

    1. FELLOWS' JOURNAL CLUBADULT BRAIN
      Open Access
      Cerebral CTA with Low Tube Voltage and Low Contrast Material Volume for Detection of Intracranial Aneurysms
      Q.Q. Ni, G.Z. Chen, U.J. Schoepf, M.A.J. Klitsie, C.N. De Cecco, C.S. Zhou, S. Luo, G.M. Lu and L.J. Zhang
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1774-1780; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4803

      A cohort of 204 patients were randomly divided into 2 groups. Patients in group A (n = 102) underwent 80-kVp CTA with 30 mL of contrast agent, while patients in group B (n = 102) underwent conventional CTA (120 kVp, 60 mL of contrast agent). With DSA as a reference standard, diagnostic accuracy on a per-aneurysm basis was 89.9% for group A and 93.9% for group B. The authors conclude that in detecting intracranial aneurysms, 80-kVp/30-mL contrast CTA provides the same diagnostic accuracy as conventional CTA with substantial radiation dose and contrast agent reduction.

  24. Luo, S.

    1. FELLOWS' JOURNAL CLUBADULT BRAIN
      Open Access
      Cerebral CTA with Low Tube Voltage and Low Contrast Material Volume for Detection of Intracranial Aneurysms
      Q.Q. Ni, G.Z. Chen, U.J. Schoepf, M.A.J. Klitsie, C.N. De Cecco, C.S. Zhou, S. Luo, G.M. Lu and L.J. Zhang
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1774-1780; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4803

      A cohort of 204 patients were randomly divided into 2 groups. Patients in group A (n = 102) underwent 80-kVp CTA with 30 mL of contrast agent, while patients in group B (n = 102) underwent conventional CTA (120 kVp, 60 mL of contrast agent). With DSA as a reference standard, diagnostic accuracy on a per-aneurysm basis was 89.9% for group A and 93.9% for group B. The authors conclude that in detecting intracranial aneurysms, 80-kVp/30-mL contrast CTA provides the same diagnostic accuracy as conventional CTA with substantial radiation dose and contrast agent reduction.

M

  1. Majoie, C.B.L.M.

    1. ADULT BRAIN
      Open Access
      White Matter Hyperintensity Volume and Cerebral Perfusion in Older Individuals with Hypertension Using Arterial Spin-Labeling
      J.W. van Dalen, H.J.M.M. Mutsaerts, A.J. Nederveen, H. Vrenken, M.D. Steenwijk, M.W.A. Caan, C.B.L.M. Majoie, W.A. van Gool and E. Richard
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1824-1830; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4828
  2. Matsuda, M.

    1. FELLOWS' JOURNAL CLUBADULT BRAIN
      Open Access
      High-Convexity Tightness Predicts the Shunt Response in Idiopathic Normal Pressure Hydrocephalus
      W. Narita, Y. Nishio, T. Baba, O. Iizuka, T. Ishihara, M. Matsuda, M. Iwasaki, T. Tominaga and E. Mori
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1831-1837; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4838

      Sixty patients with idiopathic normal pressure hydrocephalus underwent presurgical brain MR imaging and clinical evaluation before and 1 year after shunt surgery. The authors assessed the MR imaging features including Evans index, high-convexity tightness, Sylvian fissure dilation, callosal angle, focal enlargement of the cortical sulci, bumps in the lateral ventricular roof, and deep white matter and periventricular hyperintensities. Multiple linear regression analyses demonstrated that presurgical high-convexity tightness alone predicted the improvement of the clinical symptoms 1 year after surgery.

  3. Mazighi, M.

    1. INTERVENTIONAL
      You have access
      A Direct Aspiration, First Pass Technique (ADAPT) versus Stent Retrievers for Acute Stroke Therapy: An Observational Comparative Study
      B. Lapergue, R. Blanc, P. Guedin, J.-P. Decroix, J. Labreuche, C. Preda, B. Bartolini, O. Coskun, H. Redjem, M. Mazighi, F. Bourdain, G. Rodesch and M. Piotin
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1860-1865; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4840
  4. McDougall, C.G.

    1. INTERVENTIONAL
      Open Access
      Computational Modeling of Venous Sinus Stenosis in Idiopathic Intracranial Hypertension
      M.R. Levitt, P.M. McGah, K. Moon, F.C. Albuquerque, C.G. McDougall, M.Y.S. Kalani, L.J. Kim and A. Aliseda
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1876-1882; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4826
  5. McGah, P.M.

    1. INTERVENTIONAL
      Open Access
      Computational Modeling of Venous Sinus Stenosis in Idiopathic Intracranial Hypertension
      M.R. Levitt, P.M. McGah, K. Moon, F.C. Albuquerque, C.G. McDougall, M.Y.S. Kalani, L.J. Kim and A. Aliseda
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1876-1882; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4826
  6. McGauvran, A.M.

    1. You have access
      Reply:
      A.M. McGauvran and A.L. Kotsenas
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) E67; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4913
  7. Mettenburg, J.M.

    1. ADULT BRAIN
      Open Access
      Discordant Observation of Brain Injury by MRI and Malignant Electroencephalography Patterns in Comatose Survivors of Cardiac Arrest following Therapeutic Hypothermia
      J.M. Mettenburg, V. Agarwal, M. Baldwin and J.C. Rittenberger
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1787-1793; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4839
  8. Michel, M.A.

    1. EDITOR'S CHOICEHEAD & NECK
      You have access
      Imaging Appearance of SMARCB1 (INI1)-Deficient Sinonasal Carcinoma: A Newly Described Sinonasal Malignancy
      D.R. Shatzkes, L.E. Ginsberg, M. Wong, A.H. Aiken, B.F. Branstetter, M.A. Michel and N. Aygun
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1925-1929; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4841

      SMARCB1 (INI1) is a tumor-suppressor gene that has been implicated in a growing number of malignancies involving multiple anatomic sites, including the kidneys, soft tissues, and the CNS (See OMIM *601607). The authors describe a case series of 17 patients collected from 6 different centers to give a comprehensive description of the appearance of these tumors on CT, MR, and PET/CT studies. SMARCB1 (INI1)-deficient sinonasal carcinoma should be included in the differential diagnosis of a central sinonasal mass demonstrating aggressive imaging features, particularly when there is associated calcification.

  9. Mitra, S.

    1. PEDIATRICS
      Open Access
      Brain Perfusion Imaging in Neonates: An Overview
      M. Proisy, S. Mitra, C. Uria-Avellana, M. Sokolska, N.J. Robertson, F. Le Jeune and J.-C. Ferré
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1766-1773; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4778
  10. Montalban, X.

    1. ADULT BRAIN
      You have access
      Improved Automatic Detection of New T2 Lesions in Multiple Sclerosis Using Deformation Fields
      M. Cabezas, J.F. Corral, A. Oliver, Y. Díez, M. Tintoré, C. Auger, X. Montalban, X. Lladó, D. Pareto and À. Rovira
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1816-1823; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4829
  11. Moon, K.

    1. INTERVENTIONAL
      Open Access
      Computational Modeling of Venous Sinus Stenosis in Idiopathic Intracranial Hypertension
      M.R. Levitt, P.M. McGah, K. Moon, F.C. Albuquerque, C.G. McDougall, M.Y.S. Kalani, L.J. Kim and A. Aliseda
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1876-1882; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4826
  12. Mori, E.

    1. FELLOWS' JOURNAL CLUBADULT BRAIN
      Open Access
      High-Convexity Tightness Predicts the Shunt Response in Idiopathic Normal Pressure Hydrocephalus
      W. Narita, Y. Nishio, T. Baba, O. Iizuka, T. Ishihara, M. Matsuda, M. Iwasaki, T. Tominaga and E. Mori
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1831-1837; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4838

      Sixty patients with idiopathic normal pressure hydrocephalus underwent presurgical brain MR imaging and clinical evaluation before and 1 year after shunt surgery. The authors assessed the MR imaging features including Evans index, high-convexity tightness, Sylvian fissure dilation, callosal angle, focal enlargement of the cortical sulci, bumps in the lateral ventricular roof, and deep white matter and periventricular hyperintensities. Multiple linear regression analyses demonstrated that presurgical high-convexity tightness alone predicted the improvement of the clinical symptoms 1 year after surgery.

  13. Morioka, T.

    1. EXTRACRANIAL VASCULAR
      You have access
      Clinical Significance of the Champagne Bottle Neck Sign in the Extracranial Carotid Arteries of Patients with Moyamoya Disease
      C. Yasuda, S. Arakawa, T. Shimogawa, Y. Kanazawa, T. Sayama, S. Haga and T. Morioka
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1898-1902; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4815
  14. Morotti, A.

    1. You have access
      Reply:
      A. Morotti, J.M. Romero, R. Gupta and J.N. Goldstein
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) E64; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4887
    2. ADULT BRAIN
      Open Access
      Effect of CTA Tube Current on Spot Sign Detection and Accuracy for Prediction of Intracerebral Hemorrhage Expansion
      A. Morotti, J.M. Romero, M.J. Jessel, H.B. Brouwers, R. Gupta, K. Schwab, A. Vashkevich, A. Ayres, C.D. Anderson, M.E. Gurol, A. Viswanathan, S.M. Greenberg, J. Rosand and J.N. Goldstein
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1781-1786; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4810
  15. Mukherjee, Sugoto

    1. You have access
      Perspectives
      Sugoto Mukherjee
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1763; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.P0025
  16. Mutsaerts, H.J.M.M.

    1. ADULT BRAIN
      Open Access
      White Matter Hyperintensity Volume and Cerebral Perfusion in Older Individuals with Hypertension Using Arterial Spin-Labeling
      J.W. van Dalen, H.J.M.M. Mutsaerts, A.J. Nederveen, H. Vrenken, M.D. Steenwijk, M.W.A. Caan, C.B.L.M. Majoie, W.A. van Gool and E. Richard
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1824-1830; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4828

N

  1. Namba, H.

    1. ADULT BRAIN
      Open Access
      Shear Stiffness of 4 Common Intracranial Tumors Measured Using MR Elastography: Comparison with Intraoperative Consistency Grading
      N. Sakai, Y. Takehara, S. Yamashita, N. Ohishi, H. Kawaji, T. Sameshima, S. Baba, H. Sakahara and H. Namba
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1851-1859; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4832
  2. Narita, W.

    1. FELLOWS' JOURNAL CLUBADULT BRAIN
      Open Access
      High-Convexity Tightness Predicts the Shunt Response in Idiopathic Normal Pressure Hydrocephalus
      W. Narita, Y. Nishio, T. Baba, O. Iizuka, T. Ishihara, M. Matsuda, M. Iwasaki, T. Tominaga and E. Mori
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1831-1837; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4838

      Sixty patients with idiopathic normal pressure hydrocephalus underwent presurgical brain MR imaging and clinical evaluation before and 1 year after shunt surgery. The authors assessed the MR imaging features including Evans index, high-convexity tightness, Sylvian fissure dilation, callosal angle, focal enlargement of the cortical sulci, bumps in the lateral ventricular roof, and deep white matter and periventricular hyperintensities. Multiple linear regression analyses demonstrated that presurgical high-convexity tightness alone predicted the improvement of the clinical symptoms 1 year after surgery.

  3. Nederveen, A.J.

    1. ADULT BRAIN
      Open Access
      White Matter Hyperintensity Volume and Cerebral Perfusion in Older Individuals with Hypertension Using Arterial Spin-Labeling
      J.W. van Dalen, H.J.M.M. Mutsaerts, A.J. Nederveen, H. Vrenken, M.D. Steenwijk, M.W.A. Caan, C.B.L.M. Majoie, W.A. van Gool and E. Richard
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1824-1830; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4828
  4. Nestrasil, I.

    1. PEDIATRICS
      Open Access
      Volumetric Description of Brain Atrophy in Neuronal Ceroid Lipofuscinosis 2: Supratentorial Gray Matter Shows Uniform Disease Progression
      U. Löbel, J. Sedlacik, M. Nickel, S. Lezius, J. Fiehler, I. Nestrasil, A. Kohlschütter and A. Schulz
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1938-1943; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4816
  5. Ni, Q.Q.

    1. FELLOWS' JOURNAL CLUBADULT BRAIN
      Open Access
      Cerebral CTA with Low Tube Voltage and Low Contrast Material Volume for Detection of Intracranial Aneurysms
      Q.Q. Ni, G.Z. Chen, U.J. Schoepf, M.A.J. Klitsie, C.N. De Cecco, C.S. Zhou, S. Luo, G.M. Lu and L.J. Zhang
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1774-1780; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4803

      A cohort of 204 patients were randomly divided into 2 groups. Patients in group A (n = 102) underwent 80-kVp CTA with 30 mL of contrast agent, while patients in group B (n = 102) underwent conventional CTA (120 kVp, 60 mL of contrast agent). With DSA as a reference standard, diagnostic accuracy on a per-aneurysm basis was 89.9% for group A and 93.9% for group B. The authors conclude that in detecting intracranial aneurysms, 80-kVp/30-mL contrast CTA provides the same diagnostic accuracy as conventional CTA with substantial radiation dose and contrast agent reduction.

  6. Nickel, M.

    1. PEDIATRICS
      Open Access
      Volumetric Description of Brain Atrophy in Neuronal Ceroid Lipofuscinosis 2: Supratentorial Gray Matter Shows Uniform Disease Progression
      U. Löbel, J. Sedlacik, M. Nickel, S. Lezius, J. Fiehler, I. Nestrasil, A. Kohlschütter and A. Schulz
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1938-1943; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4816
  7. Nishio, Y.

    1. FELLOWS' JOURNAL CLUBADULT BRAIN
      Open Access
      High-Convexity Tightness Predicts the Shunt Response in Idiopathic Normal Pressure Hydrocephalus
      W. Narita, Y. Nishio, T. Baba, O. Iizuka, T. Ishihara, M. Matsuda, M. Iwasaki, T. Tominaga and E. Mori
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1831-1837; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4838

      Sixty patients with idiopathic normal pressure hydrocephalus underwent presurgical brain MR imaging and clinical evaluation before and 1 year after shunt surgery. The authors assessed the MR imaging features including Evans index, high-convexity tightness, Sylvian fissure dilation, callosal angle, focal enlargement of the cortical sulci, bumps in the lateral ventricular roof, and deep white matter and periventricular hyperintensities. Multiple linear regression analyses demonstrated that presurgical high-convexity tightness alone predicted the improvement of the clinical symptoms 1 year after surgery.

  8. Northcutt, B.G.

    1. HEAD & NECK
      You have access
      High-Resolution MRI Findings following Trigeminal Rhizotomy
      B.G. Northcutt, D.P. Seeburg, J. Shin, N. Aygun, D.A. Herzka, D. Theodros, C.R. Goodwin, C. Bettegowda, M. Lim and A.M. Blitz
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1920-1924; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4868

O

  1. O'Connor, P.

    1. ADULT BRAIN
      Open Access
      Regional Frontal Perfusion Deficits in Relapsing-Remitting Multiple Sclerosis with Cognitive Decline
      R. Vitorino, S.-P. Hojjat, C.G. Cantrell, A. Feinstein, L. Zhang, L. Lee, P. O'Connor, T.J. Carroll and R.I. Aviv
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1800-1807; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4824
  2. Ohishi, N.

    1. ADULT BRAIN
      Open Access
      Shear Stiffness of 4 Common Intracranial Tumors Measured Using MR Elastography: Comparison with Intraoperative Consistency Grading
      N. Sakai, Y. Takehara, S. Yamashita, N. Ohishi, H. Kawaji, T. Sameshima, S. Baba, H. Sakahara and H. Namba
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1851-1859; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4832
  3. Oliver, A.

    1. ADULT BRAIN
      You have access
      Improved Automatic Detection of New T2 Lesions in Multiple Sclerosis Using Deformation Fields
      M. Cabezas, J.F. Corral, A. Oliver, Y. Díez, M. Tintoré, C. Auger, X. Montalban, X. Lladó, D. Pareto and À. Rovira
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1816-1823; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4829

P

  1. Pakdaman, M.N.

    1. HEAD & NECK
      You have access
      Blood-Labyrinth Barrier Permeability in Menière Disease and Idiopathic Sudden Sensorineural Hearing Loss: Findings on Delayed Postcontrast 3D-FLAIR MRI
      M.N. Pakdaman, G. Ishiyama, A. Ishiyama, K.A. Peng, H.J. Kim, W.B. Pope and A.R. Sepahdari
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1903-1908; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4822
  2. Pareto, D.

    1. ADULT BRAIN
      You have access
      Improved Automatic Detection of New T2 Lesions in Multiple Sclerosis Using Deformation Fields
      M. Cabezas, J.F. Corral, A. Oliver, Y. Díez, M. Tintoré, C. Auger, X. Montalban, X. Lladó, D. Pareto and À. Rovira
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1816-1823; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4829
  3. Patay, Z.

    1. PEDIATRICS
      Open Access
      MRI Evaluation of Non-Necrotic T2-Hyperintense Foci in Pediatric Diffuse Intrinsic Pontine Glioma
      O. Clerk-Lamalice, W.E. Reddick, X. Li, Y. Li, A. Edwards, J.O. Glass and Z. Patay
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1930-1937; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4814
  4. Peng, K.A.

    1. HEAD & NECK
      You have access
      Blood-Labyrinth Barrier Permeability in Menière Disease and Idiopathic Sudden Sensorineural Hearing Loss: Findings on Delayed Postcontrast 3D-FLAIR MRI
      M.N. Pakdaman, G. Ishiyama, A. Ishiyama, K.A. Peng, H.J. Kim, W.B. Pope and A.R. Sepahdari
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1903-1908; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4822
  5. Piotin, M.

    1. INTERVENTIONAL
      You have access
      A Direct Aspiration, First Pass Technique (ADAPT) versus Stent Retrievers for Acute Stroke Therapy: An Observational Comparative Study
      B. Lapergue, R. Blanc, P. Guedin, J.-P. Decroix, J. Labreuche, C. Preda, B. Bartolini, O. Coskun, H. Redjem, M. Mazighi, F. Bourdain, G. Rodesch and M. Piotin
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1860-1865; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4840
    2. EDITOR'S CHOICEINTERVENTIONAL
      You have access
      Ocular Signs Caused by Dural Arteriovenous Fistula without Involvement of the Cavernous Sinus: A Case Series with Review of the Literature
      T. Robert, D. Botta, R. Blanc, R. Fahed, G. Ciccio, S. Smajda, H. Redjem and M. Piotin
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1870-1875; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4831

      Ocular signs are unusual in the presentation of cranial dural arteriovenous fistulas in locations other than the cavernous sinus. Between 2000–2015, 13 patients met the inclusion criteria for this retrospective analysis. The most common signs were chemosis (61.5%), loss of visual acuity (38.5%), exophthalmia (38.5%), and ocular hypertension (7.7%). Dural arteriovenous fistulas presenting with ocular signs were classified into 4 types due to their pathologic mechanism (local venous reflux into the superior ophthalmic vein, massive venous engorgement of the cerebrum responsible for intracranial hypertension, compression of an oculomotor nerve by a venous dilation, or intraorbital fistula with drainage into the superior ophthalmic vein).

  6. Pope, W.B.

    1. HEAD & NECK
      You have access
      Blood-Labyrinth Barrier Permeability in Menière Disease and Idiopathic Sudden Sensorineural Hearing Loss: Findings on Delayed Postcontrast 3D-FLAIR MRI
      M.N. Pakdaman, G. Ishiyama, A. Ishiyama, K.A. Peng, H.J. Kim, W.B. Pope and A.R. Sepahdari
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1903-1908; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4822
  7. Poretti, A.

    1. You have access
      Neuroimaging Findings in Congenital Zika Syndrome
      A. Poretti and T.A.G.M. Huisman
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1764-1765; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4924
  8. Prabhu, A.V.

    1. HEAD & NECK
      You have access
      The CT Prevalence of Arrested Pneumatization of the Sphenoid Sinus in Patients with Sickle Cell Disease
      A.V. Prabhu and B.F. Branstetter
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1916-1919; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4801
  9. Preda, C.

    1. INTERVENTIONAL
      You have access
      A Direct Aspiration, First Pass Technique (ADAPT) versus Stent Retrievers for Acute Stroke Therapy: An Observational Comparative Study
      B. Lapergue, R. Blanc, P. Guedin, J.-P. Decroix, J. Labreuche, C. Preda, B. Bartolini, O. Coskun, H. Redjem, M. Mazighi, F. Bourdain, G. Rodesch and M. Piotin
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1860-1865; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4840
  10. Proisy, M.

    1. PEDIATRICS
      Open Access
      Brain Perfusion Imaging in Neonates: An Overview
      M. Proisy, S. Mitra, C. Uria-Avellana, M. Sokolska, N.J. Robertson, F. Le Jeune and J.-C. Ferré
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1766-1773; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4778
  11. Puffer, R.C.

    1. FELLOWS' JOURNAL CLUBINTERVENTIONAL
      You have access
      Flow Diversion for Ophthalmic Artery Aneurysms
      A.M. Burrows, W. Brinjikji, R.C. Puffer, H. Cloft, D.F. Kallmes and G. Lanzino
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1866-1869; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4835

      This is a retrospective review of 48 patients with 50 carotid-ophthalmic aneurysms in which 44 patients with 46 aneurysms were treated with flow diversion from June 2009 to June 2015. There were no permanent adverse visual outcomes. There was 1 death due to late intraparenchymal hemorrhage (2.2%). Six-month angiography showed complete occlusion in 24 of 37 patients (64.9%), and 3-year angiography results showed occlusion in 24 of 25 patients (96%).

R

  1. Reddick, W.E.

    1. PEDIATRICS
      Open Access
      MRI Evaluation of Non-Necrotic T2-Hyperintense Foci in Pediatric Diffuse Intrinsic Pontine Glioma
      O. Clerk-Lamalice, W.E. Reddick, X. Li, Y. Li, A. Edwards, J.O. Glass and Z. Patay
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1930-1937; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4814
  2. Redjem, H.

    1. INTERVENTIONAL
      You have access
      A Direct Aspiration, First Pass Technique (ADAPT) versus Stent Retrievers for Acute Stroke Therapy: An Observational Comparative Study
      B. Lapergue, R. Blanc, P. Guedin, J.-P. Decroix, J. Labreuche, C. Preda, B. Bartolini, O. Coskun, H. Redjem, M. Mazighi, F. Bourdain, G. Rodesch and M. Piotin
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1860-1865; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4840
    2. EDITOR'S CHOICEINTERVENTIONAL
      You have access
      Ocular Signs Caused by Dural Arteriovenous Fistula without Involvement of the Cavernous Sinus: A Case Series with Review of the Literature
      T. Robert, D. Botta, R. Blanc, R. Fahed, G. Ciccio, S. Smajda, H. Redjem and M. Piotin
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1870-1875; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4831

      Ocular signs are unusual in the presentation of cranial dural arteriovenous fistulas in locations other than the cavernous sinus. Between 2000–2015, 13 patients met the inclusion criteria for this retrospective analysis. The most common signs were chemosis (61.5%), loss of visual acuity (38.5%), exophthalmia (38.5%), and ocular hypertension (7.7%). Dural arteriovenous fistulas presenting with ocular signs were classified into 4 types due to their pathologic mechanism (local venous reflux into the superior ophthalmic vein, massive venous engorgement of the cerebrum responsible for intracranial hypertension, compression of an oculomotor nerve by a venous dilation, or intraorbital fistula with drainage into the superior ophthalmic vein).

  3. Reeder, K.

    1. PEDIATRICS
      You have access
      MR Imaging of the Cervical Spine in Nonaccidental Trauma: A Tertiary Institution Experience
      R. Jacob, M. Cox, K. Koral, C. Greenwell, Y. Xi, L. Vinson, K. Reeder, B. Weprin, R. Huang and T.N. Booth
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1944-1950; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4817
  4. Richard, E.

    1. ADULT BRAIN
      Open Access
      White Matter Hyperintensity Volume and Cerebral Perfusion in Older Individuals with Hypertension Using Arterial Spin-Labeling
      J.W. van Dalen, H.J.M.M. Mutsaerts, A.J. Nederveen, H. Vrenken, M.D. Steenwijk, M.W.A. Caan, C.B.L.M. Majoie, W.A. van Gool and E. Richard
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1824-1830; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4828
  5. Rittenberger, J.C.

    1. ADULT BRAIN
      Open Access
      Discordant Observation of Brain Injury by MRI and Malignant Electroencephalography Patterns in Comatose Survivors of Cardiac Arrest following Therapeutic Hypothermia
      J.M. Mettenburg, V. Agarwal, M. Baldwin and J.C. Rittenberger
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1787-1793; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4839
  6. Robert, T.

    1. EDITOR'S CHOICEINTERVENTIONAL
      You have access
      Ocular Signs Caused by Dural Arteriovenous Fistula without Involvement of the Cavernous Sinus: A Case Series with Review of the Literature
      T. Robert, D. Botta, R. Blanc, R. Fahed, G. Ciccio, S. Smajda, H. Redjem and M. Piotin
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1870-1875; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4831

      Ocular signs are unusual in the presentation of cranial dural arteriovenous fistulas in locations other than the cavernous sinus. Between 2000–2015, 13 patients met the inclusion criteria for this retrospective analysis. The most common signs were chemosis (61.5%), loss of visual acuity (38.5%), exophthalmia (38.5%), and ocular hypertension (7.7%). Dural arteriovenous fistulas presenting with ocular signs were classified into 4 types due to their pathologic mechanism (local venous reflux into the superior ophthalmic vein, massive venous engorgement of the cerebrum responsible for intracranial hypertension, compression of an oculomotor nerve by a venous dilation, or intraorbital fistula with drainage into the superior ophthalmic vein).

  7. Robertson, N.J.

    1. PEDIATRICS
      Open Access
      Brain Perfusion Imaging in Neonates: An Overview
      M. Proisy, S. Mitra, C. Uria-Avellana, M. Sokolska, N.J. Robertson, F. Le Jeune and J.-C. Ferré
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1766-1773; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4778
  8. Rodesch, G.

    1. INTERVENTIONAL
      You have access
      A Direct Aspiration, First Pass Technique (ADAPT) versus Stent Retrievers for Acute Stroke Therapy: An Observational Comparative Study
      B. Lapergue, R. Blanc, P. Guedin, J.-P. Decroix, J. Labreuche, C. Preda, B. Bartolini, O. Coskun, H. Redjem, M. Mazighi, F. Bourdain, G. Rodesch and M. Piotin
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1860-1865; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4840
  9. Romero, J.M.

    1. You have access
      Reply:
      A. Morotti, J.M. Romero, R. Gupta and J.N. Goldstein
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) E64; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4887
    2. ADULT BRAIN
      Open Access
      Effect of CTA Tube Current on Spot Sign Detection and Accuracy for Prediction of Intracerebral Hemorrhage Expansion
      A. Morotti, J.M. Romero, M.J. Jessel, H.B. Brouwers, R. Gupta, K. Schwab, A. Vashkevich, A. Ayres, C.D. Anderson, M.E. Gurol, A. Viswanathan, S.M. Greenberg, J. Rosand and J.N. Goldstein
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1781-1786; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4810
  10. Rosand, J.

    1. ADULT BRAIN
      Open Access
      Effect of CTA Tube Current on Spot Sign Detection and Accuracy for Prediction of Intracerebral Hemorrhage Expansion
      A. Morotti, J.M. Romero, M.J. Jessel, H.B. Brouwers, R. Gupta, K. Schwab, A. Vashkevich, A. Ayres, C.D. Anderson, M.E. Gurol, A. Viswanathan, S.M. Greenberg, J. Rosand and J.N. Goldstein
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1781-1786; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4810
  11. Rovira, À.

    1. ADULT BRAIN
      You have access
      Improved Automatic Detection of New T2 Lesions in Multiple Sclerosis Using Deformation Fields
      M. Cabezas, J.F. Corral, A. Oliver, Y. Díez, M. Tintoré, C. Auger, X. Montalban, X. Lladó, D. Pareto and À. Rovira
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1816-1823; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4829
  12. Rutt, B.

    1. ADULT BRAIN
      Open Access
      In Vivo 7T MR Quantitative Susceptibility Mapping Reveals Opposite Susceptibility Contrast between Cortical and White Matter Lesions in Multiple Sclerosis
      W. Bian, E. Tranvinh, T. Tourdias, M. Han, T. Liu, Y. Wang, B. Rutt and M.M. Zeineh
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1808-1815; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4830

S

  1. Sakahara, H.

    1. ADULT BRAIN
      Open Access
      Shear Stiffness of 4 Common Intracranial Tumors Measured Using MR Elastography: Comparison with Intraoperative Consistency Grading
      N. Sakai, Y. Takehara, S. Yamashita, N. Ohishi, H. Kawaji, T. Sameshima, S. Baba, H. Sakahara and H. Namba
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1851-1859; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4832
  2. Sakai, N.

    1. ADULT BRAIN
      Open Access
      Shear Stiffness of 4 Common Intracranial Tumors Measured Using MR Elastography: Comparison with Intraoperative Consistency Grading
      N. Sakai, Y. Takehara, S. Yamashita, N. Ohishi, H. Kawaji, T. Sameshima, S. Baba, H. Sakahara and H. Namba
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1851-1859; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4832
  3. Salustri, C.A.

    1. EDITOR'S CHOICEADULT BRAIN
      Open Access
      Magnetic Susceptibility from Quantitative Susceptibility Mapping Can Differentiate New Enhancing from Nonenhancing Multiple Sclerosis Lesions without Gadolinium Injection
      Y. Zhang, S.A. Gauthier, A. Gupta, L. Tu, J. Comunale, G.C.-Y. Chiang, W. Chen, C.A. Salustri, W. Zhu and Y. Wang
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1794-1799; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4856

      In 54 patients, new T2-weighted lesions were evaluated for enhancement on conventional T1-weighted imaging with gadolinium, and their susceptibility values were measured on quantitative susceptibility mapping. Eighty-six of 133 new lesions that were gadolinium-enhancing had relative susceptibility values significantly lower than those of nonenhancing lesions. Using susceptibility values to discriminate enhancing from nonenhancing lesions showed a sensitivity of 88.4% and specificity of 91.5%, with a cutoff value of 11.2 parts per billion for QSM.

  4. Sameshima, T.

    1. ADULT BRAIN
      Open Access
      Shear Stiffness of 4 Common Intracranial Tumors Measured Using MR Elastography: Comparison with Intraoperative Consistency Grading
      N. Sakai, Y. Takehara, S. Yamashita, N. Ohishi, H. Kawaji, T. Sameshima, S. Baba, H. Sakahara and H. Namba
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1851-1859; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4832
  5. Sayama, T.

    1. EXTRACRANIAL VASCULAR
      You have access
      Clinical Significance of the Champagne Bottle Neck Sign in the Extracranial Carotid Arteries of Patients with Moyamoya Disease
      C. Yasuda, S. Arakawa, T. Shimogawa, Y. Kanazawa, T. Sayama, S. Haga and T. Morioka
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1898-1902; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4815
  6. Schoepf, U.J.

    1. FELLOWS' JOURNAL CLUBADULT BRAIN
      Open Access
      Cerebral CTA with Low Tube Voltage and Low Contrast Material Volume for Detection of Intracranial Aneurysms
      Q.Q. Ni, G.Z. Chen, U.J. Schoepf, M.A.J. Klitsie, C.N. De Cecco, C.S. Zhou, S. Luo, G.M. Lu and L.J. Zhang
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1774-1780; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4803

      A cohort of 204 patients were randomly divided into 2 groups. Patients in group A (n = 102) underwent 80-kVp CTA with 30 mL of contrast agent, while patients in group B (n = 102) underwent conventional CTA (120 kVp, 60 mL of contrast agent). With DSA as a reference standard, diagnostic accuracy on a per-aneurysm basis was 89.9% for group A and 93.9% for group B. The authors conclude that in detecting intracranial aneurysms, 80-kVp/30-mL contrast CTA provides the same diagnostic accuracy as conventional CTA with substantial radiation dose and contrast agent reduction.

  7. Schulz, A.

    1. PEDIATRICS
      Open Access
      Volumetric Description of Brain Atrophy in Neuronal Ceroid Lipofuscinosis 2: Supratentorial Gray Matter Shows Uniform Disease Progression
      U. Löbel, J. Sedlacik, M. Nickel, S. Lezius, J. Fiehler, I. Nestrasil, A. Kohlschütter and A. Schulz
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1938-1943; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4816
  8. Schwab, K.

    1. ADULT BRAIN
      Open Access
      Effect of CTA Tube Current on Spot Sign Detection and Accuracy for Prediction of Intracerebral Hemorrhage Expansion
      A. Morotti, J.M. Romero, M.J. Jessel, H.B. Brouwers, R. Gupta, K. Schwab, A. Vashkevich, A. Ayres, C.D. Anderson, M.E. Gurol, A. Viswanathan, S.M. Greenberg, J. Rosand and J.N. Goldstein
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1781-1786; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4810
  9. Sedlacik, J.

    1. PEDIATRICS
      Open Access
      Volumetric Description of Brain Atrophy in Neuronal Ceroid Lipofuscinosis 2: Supratentorial Gray Matter Shows Uniform Disease Progression
      U. Löbel, J. Sedlacik, M. Nickel, S. Lezius, J. Fiehler, I. Nestrasil, A. Kohlschütter and A. Schulz
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1938-1943; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4816
  10. Seeburg, D.P.

    1. HEAD & NECK
      You have access
      High-Resolution MRI Findings following Trigeminal Rhizotomy
      B.G. Northcutt, D.P. Seeburg, J. Shin, N. Aygun, D.A. Herzka, D. Theodros, C.R. Goodwin, C. Bettegowda, M. Lim and A.M. Blitz
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1920-1924; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4868
  11. Sepahdari, A.R.

    1. HEAD & NECK
      You have access
      Blood-Labyrinth Barrier Permeability in Menière Disease and Idiopathic Sudden Sensorineural Hearing Loss: Findings on Delayed Postcontrast 3D-FLAIR MRI
      M.N. Pakdaman, G. Ishiyama, A. Ishiyama, K.A. Peng, H.J. Kim, W.B. Pope and A.R. Sepahdari
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1903-1908; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4822
  12. Shatzkes, D.R.

    1. EDITOR'S CHOICEHEAD & NECK
      You have access
      Imaging Appearance of SMARCB1 (INI1)-Deficient Sinonasal Carcinoma: A Newly Described Sinonasal Malignancy
      D.R. Shatzkes, L.E. Ginsberg, M. Wong, A.H. Aiken, B.F. Branstetter, M.A. Michel and N. Aygun
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1925-1929; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4841

      SMARCB1 (INI1) is a tumor-suppressor gene that has been implicated in a growing number of malignancies involving multiple anatomic sites, including the kidneys, soft tissues, and the CNS (See OMIM *601607). The authors describe a case series of 17 patients collected from 6 different centers to give a comprehensive description of the appearance of these tumors on CT, MR, and PET/CT studies. SMARCB1 (INI1)-deficient sinonasal carcinoma should be included in the differential diagnosis of a central sinonasal mass demonstrating aggressive imaging features, particularly when there is associated calcification.

  13. She, D.

    1. ADULT BRAIN
      You have access
      Differentiating Hemangioblastomas from Brain Metastases Using Diffusion-Weighted Imaging and Dynamic Susceptibility Contrast-Enhanced Perfusion-Weighted MR Imaging
      D. She, X. Yang, Z. Xing and D. Cao
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1844-1850; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4809
  14. Shimogawa, T.

    1. EXTRACRANIAL VASCULAR
      You have access
      Clinical Significance of the Champagne Bottle Neck Sign in the Extracranial Carotid Arteries of Patients with Moyamoya Disease
      C. Yasuda, S. Arakawa, T. Shimogawa, Y. Kanazawa, T. Sayama, S. Haga and T. Morioka
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1898-1902; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4815
  15. Shin, J.

    1. HEAD & NECK
      You have access
      High-Resolution MRI Findings following Trigeminal Rhizotomy
      B.G. Northcutt, D.P. Seeburg, J. Shin, N. Aygun, D.A. Herzka, D. Theodros, C.R. Goodwin, C. Bettegowda, M. Lim and A.M. Blitz
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1920-1924; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4868
  16. Singh, R.

    1. ADULT BRAIN
      Open Access
      Dynamic Susceptibility Contrast-Enhanced MR Perfusion Imaging in Assessing Recurrent Glioblastoma Response to Superselective Intra-Arterial Bevacizumab Therapy
      R. Singh, K. Kesavabhotla, S.A. Kishore, Z. Zhou, A.J. Tsiouris, C.G. Filippi, J.A. Boockvar and I. Kovanlikaya
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1838-1843; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4823
  17. Smajda, S.

    1. EDITOR'S CHOICEINTERVENTIONAL
      You have access
      Ocular Signs Caused by Dural Arteriovenous Fistula without Involvement of the Cavernous Sinus: A Case Series with Review of the Literature
      T. Robert, D. Botta, R. Blanc, R. Fahed, G. Ciccio, S. Smajda, H. Redjem and M. Piotin
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1870-1875; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4831

      Ocular signs are unusual in the presentation of cranial dural arteriovenous fistulas in locations other than the cavernous sinus. Between 2000–2015, 13 patients met the inclusion criteria for this retrospective analysis. The most common signs were chemosis (61.5%), loss of visual acuity (38.5%), exophthalmia (38.5%), and ocular hypertension (7.7%). Dural arteriovenous fistulas presenting with ocular signs were classified into 4 types due to their pathologic mechanism (local venous reflux into the superior ophthalmic vein, massive venous engorgement of the cerebrum responsible for intracranial hypertension, compression of an oculomotor nerve by a venous dilation, or intraorbital fistula with drainage into the superior ophthalmic vein).

  18. Sokolska, M.

    1. PEDIATRICS
      Open Access
      Brain Perfusion Imaging in Neonates: An Overview
      M. Proisy, S. Mitra, C. Uria-Avellana, M. Sokolska, N.J. Robertson, F. Le Jeune and J.-C. Ferré
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1766-1773; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4778
  19. Steenwijk, M.D.

    1. ADULT BRAIN
      Open Access
      White Matter Hyperintensity Volume and Cerebral Perfusion in Older Individuals with Hypertension Using Arterial Spin-Labeling
      J.W. van Dalen, H.J.M.M. Mutsaerts, A.J. Nederveen, H. Vrenken, M.D. Steenwijk, M.W.A. Caan, C.B.L.M. Majoie, W.A. van Gool and E. Richard
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1824-1830; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4828

T

  1. Takehara, Y.

    1. ADULT BRAIN
      Open Access
      Shear Stiffness of 4 Common Intracranial Tumors Measured Using MR Elastography: Comparison with Intraoperative Consistency Grading
      N. Sakai, Y. Takehara, S. Yamashita, N. Ohishi, H. Kawaji, T. Sameshima, S. Baba, H. Sakahara and H. Namba
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1851-1859; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4832
  2. Teng, M.M.H.

    1. INTERVENTIONAL
      You have access
      Peritherapeutic Hemodynamic Changes of Carotid Stenting Evaluated with Quantitative DSA in Patients with Carotid Stenosis
      M.M.H. Teng, F.-C. Chang, C.-J. Lin, L. Chiang, J.-S. Hong and Y.-H. Kao
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1883-1888; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4813
  3. Theodros, D.

    1. HEAD & NECK
      You have access
      High-Resolution MRI Findings following Trigeminal Rhizotomy
      B.G. Northcutt, D.P. Seeburg, J. Shin, N. Aygun, D.A. Herzka, D. Theodros, C.R. Goodwin, C. Bettegowda, M. Lim and A.M. Blitz
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1920-1924; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4868
  4. Tintoré, M.

    1. ADULT BRAIN
      You have access
      Improved Automatic Detection of New T2 Lesions in Multiple Sclerosis Using Deformation Fields
      M. Cabezas, J.F. Corral, A. Oliver, Y. Díez, M. Tintoré, C. Auger, X. Montalban, X. Lladó, D. Pareto and À. Rovira
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1816-1823; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4829
  5. Tominaga, T.

    1. FELLOWS' JOURNAL CLUBADULT BRAIN
      Open Access
      High-Convexity Tightness Predicts the Shunt Response in Idiopathic Normal Pressure Hydrocephalus
      W. Narita, Y. Nishio, T. Baba, O. Iizuka, T. Ishihara, M. Matsuda, M. Iwasaki, T. Tominaga and E. Mori
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1831-1837; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4838

      Sixty patients with idiopathic normal pressure hydrocephalus underwent presurgical brain MR imaging and clinical evaluation before and 1 year after shunt surgery. The authors assessed the MR imaging features including Evans index, high-convexity tightness, Sylvian fissure dilation, callosal angle, focal enlargement of the cortical sulci, bumps in the lateral ventricular roof, and deep white matter and periventricular hyperintensities. Multiple linear regression analyses demonstrated that presurgical high-convexity tightness alone predicted the improvement of the clinical symptoms 1 year after surgery.

  6. Tourdias, T.

    1. ADULT BRAIN
      Open Access
      In Vivo 7T MR Quantitative Susceptibility Mapping Reveals Opposite Susceptibility Contrast between Cortical and White Matter Lesions in Multiple Sclerosis
      W. Bian, E. Tranvinh, T. Tourdias, M. Han, T. Liu, Y. Wang, B. Rutt and M.M. Zeineh
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1808-1815; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4830
  7. Tranvinh, E.

    1. ADULT BRAIN
      Open Access
      In Vivo 7T MR Quantitative Susceptibility Mapping Reveals Opposite Susceptibility Contrast between Cortical and White Matter Lesions in Multiple Sclerosis
      W. Bian, E. Tranvinh, T. Tourdias, M. Han, T. Liu, Y. Wang, B. Rutt and M.M. Zeineh
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1808-1815; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4830
  8. Tsiouris, A.J.

    1. ADULT BRAIN
      Open Access
      Dynamic Susceptibility Contrast-Enhanced MR Perfusion Imaging in Assessing Recurrent Glioblastoma Response to Superselective Intra-Arterial Bevacizumab Therapy
      R. Singh, K. Kesavabhotla, S.A. Kishore, Z. Zhou, A.J. Tsiouris, C.G. Filippi, J.A. Boockvar and I. Kovanlikaya
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1838-1843; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4823
  9. Tu, L.

    1. EDITOR'S CHOICEADULT BRAIN
      Open Access
      Magnetic Susceptibility from Quantitative Susceptibility Mapping Can Differentiate New Enhancing from Nonenhancing Multiple Sclerosis Lesions without Gadolinium Injection
      Y. Zhang, S.A. Gauthier, A. Gupta, L. Tu, J. Comunale, G.C.-Y. Chiang, W. Chen, C.A. Salustri, W. Zhu and Y. Wang
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1794-1799; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4856

      In 54 patients, new T2-weighted lesions were evaluated for enhancement on conventional T1-weighted imaging with gadolinium, and their susceptibility values were measured on quantitative susceptibility mapping. Eighty-six of 133 new lesions that were gadolinium-enhancing had relative susceptibility values significantly lower than those of nonenhancing lesions. Using susceptibility values to discriminate enhancing from nonenhancing lesions showed a sensitivity of 88.4% and specificity of 91.5%, with a cutoff value of 11.2 parts per billion for QSM.

  10. Tu, P.-C.

    1. EXTRACRANIAL VASCULAR
      Open Access
      Intervention versus Aggressive Medical Therapy for Cognition in Severe Asymptomatic Carotid Stenosis
      C.-J. Lin, F.-C. Chang, K.-H. Chou, P.-C. Tu, Y.-H. Lee, C.-P. Lin, P.-N. Wang and I.-H. Lee
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1889-1897; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4798

U

  1. Uria-Avellana, C.

    1. PEDIATRICS
      Open Access
      Brain Perfusion Imaging in Neonates: An Overview
      M. Proisy, S. Mitra, C. Uria-Avellana, M. Sokolska, N.J. Robertson, F. Le Jeune and J.-C. Ferré
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1766-1773; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4778

V

  1. van Dalen, J.W.

    1. ADULT BRAIN
      Open Access
      White Matter Hyperintensity Volume and Cerebral Perfusion in Older Individuals with Hypertension Using Arterial Spin-Labeling
      J.W. van Dalen, H.J.M.M. Mutsaerts, A.J. Nederveen, H. Vrenken, M.D. Steenwijk, M.W.A. Caan, C.B.L.M. Majoie, W.A. van Gool and E. Richard
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1824-1830; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4828
  2. van Gool, W.A.

    1. ADULT BRAIN
      Open Access
      White Matter Hyperintensity Volume and Cerebral Perfusion in Older Individuals with Hypertension Using Arterial Spin-Labeling
      J.W. van Dalen, H.J.M.M. Mutsaerts, A.J. Nederveen, H. Vrenken, M.D. Steenwijk, M.W.A. Caan, C.B.L.M. Majoie, W.A. van Gool and E. Richard
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1824-1830; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4828
  3. Vargas, M.I.

    1. You have access
      Synthetic MR Imaging Sequence in Daily Clinical Practice
      M.I. Vargas, J. Boto and B.M. Delatre
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) E68-E69; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4895
    2. You have access
      Dual-Energy CT and Spot Sign
      M.I. Vargas and K. Lovblad
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) E63; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4894
  4. Vashkevich, A.

    1. ADULT BRAIN
      Open Access
      Effect of CTA Tube Current on Spot Sign Detection and Accuracy for Prediction of Intracerebral Hemorrhage Expansion
      A. Morotti, J.M. Romero, M.J. Jessel, H.B. Brouwers, R. Gupta, K. Schwab, A. Vashkevich, A. Ayres, C.D. Anderson, M.E. Gurol, A. Viswanathan, S.M. Greenberg, J. Rosand and J.N. Goldstein
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1781-1786; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4810
  5. Vinson, L.

    1. PEDIATRICS
      You have access
      MR Imaging of the Cervical Spine in Nonaccidental Trauma: A Tertiary Institution Experience
      R. Jacob, M. Cox, K. Koral, C. Greenwell, Y. Xi, L. Vinson, K. Reeder, B. Weprin, R. Huang and T.N. Booth
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1944-1950; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4817
  6. Viswanathan, A.

    1. ADULT BRAIN
      Open Access
      Effect of CTA Tube Current on Spot Sign Detection and Accuracy for Prediction of Intracerebral Hemorrhage Expansion
      A. Morotti, J.M. Romero, M.J. Jessel, H.B. Brouwers, R. Gupta, K. Schwab, A. Vashkevich, A. Ayres, C.D. Anderson, M.E. Gurol, A. Viswanathan, S.M. Greenberg, J. Rosand and J.N. Goldstein
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1781-1786; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4810
  7. Vitorino, R.

    1. ADULT BRAIN
      Open Access
      Regional Frontal Perfusion Deficits in Relapsing-Remitting Multiple Sclerosis with Cognitive Decline
      R. Vitorino, S.-P. Hojjat, C.G. Cantrell, A. Feinstein, L. Zhang, L. Lee, P. O'Connor, T.J. Carroll and R.I. Aviv
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1800-1807; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4824
  8. Vrenken, H.

    1. ADULT BRAIN
      Open Access
      White Matter Hyperintensity Volume and Cerebral Perfusion in Older Individuals with Hypertension Using Arterial Spin-Labeling
      J.W. van Dalen, H.J.M.M. Mutsaerts, A.J. Nederveen, H. Vrenken, M.D. Steenwijk, M.W.A. Caan, C.B.L.M. Majoie, W.A. van Gool and E. Richard
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1824-1830; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4828

W

  1. Wang, C.-W.

    1. HEAD & NECK
      You have access
      Evaluating Instantaneous Perfusion Responses of Parotid Glands to Gustatory Stimulation Using High-Temporal-Resolution Echo-Planar Diffusion-Weighted Imaging
      T.-W. Chiu, Y.-J. Liu, H.-C. Chang, Y.-H. Lee, J.-C. Lee, K. Hsu, C.-W. Wang, J.-M. Yang, H.-H. Hsu and C.-J. Juan
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1909-1915; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4852
  2. Wang, P.-N.

    1. EXTRACRANIAL VASCULAR
      Open Access
      Intervention versus Aggressive Medical Therapy for Cognition in Severe Asymptomatic Carotid Stenosis
      C.-J. Lin, F.-C. Chang, K.-H. Chou, P.-C. Tu, Y.-H. Lee, C.-P. Lin, P.-N. Wang and I.-H. Lee
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1889-1897; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4798
  3. Wang, Y.

    1. ADULT BRAIN
      Open Access
      In Vivo 7T MR Quantitative Susceptibility Mapping Reveals Opposite Susceptibility Contrast between Cortical and White Matter Lesions in Multiple Sclerosis
      W. Bian, E. Tranvinh, T. Tourdias, M. Han, T. Liu, Y. Wang, B. Rutt and M.M. Zeineh
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1808-1815; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4830
    2. EDITOR'S CHOICEADULT BRAIN
      Open Access
      Magnetic Susceptibility from Quantitative Susceptibility Mapping Can Differentiate New Enhancing from Nonenhancing Multiple Sclerosis Lesions without Gadolinium Injection
      Y. Zhang, S.A. Gauthier, A. Gupta, L. Tu, J. Comunale, G.C.-Y. Chiang, W. Chen, C.A. Salustri, W. Zhu and Y. Wang
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1794-1799; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4856

      In 54 patients, new T2-weighted lesions were evaluated for enhancement on conventional T1-weighted imaging with gadolinium, and their susceptibility values were measured on quantitative susceptibility mapping. Eighty-six of 133 new lesions that were gadolinium-enhancing had relative susceptibility values significantly lower than those of nonenhancing lesions. Using susceptibility values to discriminate enhancing from nonenhancing lesions showed a sensitivity of 88.4% and specificity of 91.5%, with a cutoff value of 11.2 parts per billion for QSM.

  4. Weprin, B.

    1. PEDIATRICS
      You have access
      MR Imaging of the Cervical Spine in Nonaccidental Trauma: A Tertiary Institution Experience
      R. Jacob, M. Cox, K. Koral, C. Greenwell, Y. Xi, L. Vinson, K. Reeder, B. Weprin, R. Huang and T.N. Booth
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1944-1950; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4817
  5. Wong, M.

    1. EDITOR'S CHOICEHEAD & NECK
      You have access
      Imaging Appearance of SMARCB1 (INI1)-Deficient Sinonasal Carcinoma: A Newly Described Sinonasal Malignancy
      D.R. Shatzkes, L.E. Ginsberg, M. Wong, A.H. Aiken, B.F. Branstetter, M.A. Michel and N. Aygun
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1925-1929; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4841

      SMARCB1 (INI1) is a tumor-suppressor gene that has been implicated in a growing number of malignancies involving multiple anatomic sites, including the kidneys, soft tissues, and the CNS (See OMIM *601607). The authors describe a case series of 17 patients collected from 6 different centers to give a comprehensive description of the appearance of these tumors on CT, MR, and PET/CT studies. SMARCB1 (INI1)-deficient sinonasal carcinoma should be included in the differential diagnosis of a central sinonasal mass demonstrating aggressive imaging features, particularly when there is associated calcification.

X

  1. Xi, Y.

    1. PEDIATRICS
      You have access
      MR Imaging of the Cervical Spine in Nonaccidental Trauma: A Tertiary Institution Experience
      R. Jacob, M. Cox, K. Koral, C. Greenwell, Y. Xi, L. Vinson, K. Reeder, B. Weprin, R. Huang and T.N. Booth
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1944-1950; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4817
  2. Xing, Z.

    1. ADULT BRAIN
      You have access
      Differentiating Hemangioblastomas from Brain Metastases Using Diffusion-Weighted Imaging and Dynamic Susceptibility Contrast-Enhanced Perfusion-Weighted MR Imaging
      D. She, X. Yang, Z. Xing and D. Cao
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1844-1850; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4809

Y

  1. Yamashita, S.

    1. ADULT BRAIN
      Open Access
      Shear Stiffness of 4 Common Intracranial Tumors Measured Using MR Elastography: Comparison with Intraoperative Consistency Grading
      N. Sakai, Y. Takehara, S. Yamashita, N. Ohishi, H. Kawaji, T. Sameshima, S. Baba, H. Sakahara and H. Namba
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1851-1859; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4832
  2. Yang, J.-M.

    1. HEAD & NECK
      You have access
      Evaluating Instantaneous Perfusion Responses of Parotid Glands to Gustatory Stimulation Using High-Temporal-Resolution Echo-Planar Diffusion-Weighted Imaging
      T.-W. Chiu, Y.-J. Liu, H.-C. Chang, Y.-H. Lee, J.-C. Lee, K. Hsu, C.-W. Wang, J.-M. Yang, H.-H. Hsu and C.-J. Juan
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1909-1915; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4852
  3. Yang, X.

    1. ADULT BRAIN
      You have access
      Differentiating Hemangioblastomas from Brain Metastases Using Diffusion-Weighted Imaging and Dynamic Susceptibility Contrast-Enhanced Perfusion-Weighted MR Imaging
      D. She, X. Yang, Z. Xing and D. Cao
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1844-1850; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4809
  4. Yasuda, C.

    1. EXTRACRANIAL VASCULAR
      You have access
      Clinical Significance of the Champagne Bottle Neck Sign in the Extracranial Carotid Arteries of Patients with Moyamoya Disease
      C. Yasuda, S. Arakawa, T. Shimogawa, Y. Kanazawa, T. Sayama, S. Haga and T. Morioka
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1898-1902; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4815

Z

  1. Zeineh, M.M.

    1. ADULT BRAIN
      Open Access
      In Vivo 7T MR Quantitative Susceptibility Mapping Reveals Opposite Susceptibility Contrast between Cortical and White Matter Lesions in Multiple Sclerosis
      W. Bian, E. Tranvinh, T. Tourdias, M. Han, T. Liu, Y. Wang, B. Rutt and M.M. Zeineh
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1808-1815; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4830
  2. Zhang, L.

    1. ADULT BRAIN
      Open Access
      Regional Frontal Perfusion Deficits in Relapsing-Remitting Multiple Sclerosis with Cognitive Decline
      R. Vitorino, S.-P. Hojjat, C.G. Cantrell, A. Feinstein, L. Zhang, L. Lee, P. O'Connor, T.J. Carroll and R.I. Aviv
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1800-1807; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4824
  3. Zhang, L.J.

    1. FELLOWS' JOURNAL CLUBADULT BRAIN
      Open Access
      Cerebral CTA with Low Tube Voltage and Low Contrast Material Volume for Detection of Intracranial Aneurysms
      Q.Q. Ni, G.Z. Chen, U.J. Schoepf, M.A.J. Klitsie, C.N. De Cecco, C.S. Zhou, S. Luo, G.M. Lu and L.J. Zhang
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1774-1780; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4803

      A cohort of 204 patients were randomly divided into 2 groups. Patients in group A (n = 102) underwent 80-kVp CTA with 30 mL of contrast agent, while patients in group B (n = 102) underwent conventional CTA (120 kVp, 60 mL of contrast agent). With DSA as a reference standard, diagnostic accuracy on a per-aneurysm basis was 89.9% for group A and 93.9% for group B. The authors conclude that in detecting intracranial aneurysms, 80-kVp/30-mL contrast CTA provides the same diagnostic accuracy as conventional CTA with substantial radiation dose and contrast agent reduction.

  4. Zhang, Y.

    1. EDITOR'S CHOICEADULT BRAIN
      Open Access
      Magnetic Susceptibility from Quantitative Susceptibility Mapping Can Differentiate New Enhancing from Nonenhancing Multiple Sclerosis Lesions without Gadolinium Injection
      Y. Zhang, S.A. Gauthier, A. Gupta, L. Tu, J. Comunale, G.C.-Y. Chiang, W. Chen, C.A. Salustri, W. Zhu and Y. Wang
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1794-1799; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4856

      In 54 patients, new T2-weighted lesions were evaluated for enhancement on conventional T1-weighted imaging with gadolinium, and their susceptibility values were measured on quantitative susceptibility mapping. Eighty-six of 133 new lesions that were gadolinium-enhancing had relative susceptibility values significantly lower than those of nonenhancing lesions. Using susceptibility values to discriminate enhancing from nonenhancing lesions showed a sensitivity of 88.4% and specificity of 91.5%, with a cutoff value of 11.2 parts per billion for QSM.

  5. Zhou, C.S.

    1. FELLOWS' JOURNAL CLUBADULT BRAIN
      Open Access
      Cerebral CTA with Low Tube Voltage and Low Contrast Material Volume for Detection of Intracranial Aneurysms
      Q.Q. Ni, G.Z. Chen, U.J. Schoepf, M.A.J. Klitsie, C.N. De Cecco, C.S. Zhou, S. Luo, G.M. Lu and L.J. Zhang
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1774-1780; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4803

      A cohort of 204 patients were randomly divided into 2 groups. Patients in group A (n = 102) underwent 80-kVp CTA with 30 mL of contrast agent, while patients in group B (n = 102) underwent conventional CTA (120 kVp, 60 mL of contrast agent). With DSA as a reference standard, diagnostic accuracy on a per-aneurysm basis was 89.9% for group A and 93.9% for group B. The authors conclude that in detecting intracranial aneurysms, 80-kVp/30-mL contrast CTA provides the same diagnostic accuracy as conventional CTA with substantial radiation dose and contrast agent reduction.

  6. Zhou, Z.

    1. ADULT BRAIN
      Open Access
      Dynamic Susceptibility Contrast-Enhanced MR Perfusion Imaging in Assessing Recurrent Glioblastoma Response to Superselective Intra-Arterial Bevacizumab Therapy
      R. Singh, K. Kesavabhotla, S.A. Kishore, Z. Zhou, A.J. Tsiouris, C.G. Filippi, J.A. Boockvar and I. Kovanlikaya
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1838-1843; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4823
  7. Zhu, W.

    1. EDITOR'S CHOICEADULT BRAIN
      Open Access
      Magnetic Susceptibility from Quantitative Susceptibility Mapping Can Differentiate New Enhancing from Nonenhancing Multiple Sclerosis Lesions without Gadolinium Injection
      Y. Zhang, S.A. Gauthier, A. Gupta, L. Tu, J. Comunale, G.C.-Y. Chiang, W. Chen, C.A. Salustri, W. Zhu and Y. Wang
      American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2016, 37 (10) 1794-1799; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4856

      In 54 patients, new T2-weighted lesions were evaluated for enhancement on conventional T1-weighted imaging with gadolinium, and their susceptibility values were measured on quantitative susceptibility mapping. Eighty-six of 133 new lesions that were gadolinium-enhancing had relative susceptibility values significantly lower than those of nonenhancing lesions. Using susceptibility values to discriminate enhancing from nonenhancing lesions showed a sensitivity of 88.4% and specificity of 91.5%, with a cutoff value of 11.2 parts per billion for QSM.

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American Journal of Neuroradiology: 37 (10)
American Journal of Neuroradiology
Vol. 37, Issue 10
1 Oct 2016
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