fig1

Reversible posterior leukoencephalopathy syndrome: single photon emission computerized tomography observations

Figure 1. Magnetic resonance imaging in a patient with reversible posterior leukoencephalopathy. FLAIR axial (TR, 6160 ms; TE, 30 ms; TI, 1100 ms; FOV 23 cm × 23 cm; matrix 256 × 192; slice thickness, 5 mm with 1 mm gap) (A); TSE T2-weighted (TR, 4500 ms; TE, 118 ms; FOV 23 cm × 23 cm; matrix 256 × 192; slice thickness, 5 mm with 1 mm gap) axial (B and C) and sagittal images (D) are shown. Figure shows hyperintensities over both thalami, posterior limb of left internal capsule and corpus callosum on FLAIR axial image (A); hyperintense signals are seen over bilateral parieto-occipital cortices (B) and both cerebellar hemispheres (C) on T2 axial images; hyperintensities over corpus callosum and cerebellum are also seen in a T2 sagittal image (D)[16]

Neuroimmunology and Neuroinflammation
ISSN 2349-6142 (Online) 2347-8659 (Print)

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