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Case #28

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Demographics: 62 years old, Female
Indication: Recent stroke

Findings

  • Focus of restricted diffusion in the dorsal left aspect of the medulla
  • Heterogeneous areas of faint restricted diffusion in the left cerebellar hemisphere and left occipital lobe with corresponding patchy T1 signal hyperintensity and susceptibility artifact, more confluent within the left occipital lobe
  • Susceptibility artifact associated with vessels overlying the inferior aspect of the left cerebellar hemisphere
  • Abnormal flow-related signal in the visualized portion of the extradural left vertebral artery
  • T2/FLAIR hyperintensity in the left cerebellar hemisphere extending into the left superior and middle cerebellar peduncles with mild swelling and partial compression of the left lateral margin of the fourth ventricle
  • Multiple remote lacunar infarcts involving the bilateral basal ganglia, right thalamus, left internal capsule, right aspect of the genu of the corpus callosum, and right cerebellar hemisphere
  • Patchy T2/FLAIR hyperintensities in the subcortical and periventricular white matter

Diagnosis

Infarcts with petechial hemorrhage

Sample Report

Small acute/early subacute infarct in the left dorsal aspect of the medulla. Subacute infarcts in the left cerebellar hemisphere and left occipital lobe with corresponding petechial hemorrhage as well as small hematoma formation in the left occipital lobe.

Associated edema and mild mass effect, more so in the left cerebellar hemisphere with mild mass effect on the fourth ventricle. No evidence of herniation or hydrocephalus.

Abnormal signal in the extradural left vertebral artery concerning for high grade stenosis or occlusion. Susceptibility artifact associated with vessels overlying the inferior aspect of the left cerebellar hemisphere is concerning for thrombus within PICA branches versus elevated deoxyhemoglobin content within cortical veins. Recommend correlation with CTA or catheter angiography.

Background of multiple remote lacunar infarcts and chronic small vessel disease.

Discussion

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