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ABSTRACT: Background and purpose
In acute hepatic encephalopathy, MR imaging abnormalities have been described in the PVWM, thalami, and corticospinal tracts. We sought to determine characteristic regions of involvement on FLAIR and DWI, to evaluate their reversibility, and to correlate MR imaging extent with clinical severity.Materials and methods
Twenty patients who presented clinically with acute hepatic encephalopathy and MR imaging <21 days after symptom onset were reviewed retrospectively. Two neuroradiologists recorded involved regions on FLAIR and DWI in each, measured ADC values in affected regions and NAWM, and scored the MR imaging severity/extent. The initial severity (West Haven grade), follow-up clinical severity (degree of improvement), and maximal PAL within ±8 days of MR imaging were recorded and correlated with the MR imaging severity.Results
On FLAIR and DWI respectively, there were abnormalities in the thalami (85%, 70%), PLIC (75%, 80%), PVWM (80%, 85%), and DBS (70%, 35%) and diffuse cortical involvement (30%, 25%). There were relatively strong significant (P < .005) correlations of FLAIR (r = 0.680, P = .001) and DWI severity (r = 0.690, P = .001) with PAL, and of PAL with the clinical outcome (r = 0.691, P = .001). Both FLAIR (r = 0.592, P = .006) and DWI (r = 0.487, P = .029) severity correlated moderately with the clinical outcome but were not significant at the P < .005 level after Bonferroni correction.Conclusions
Patients with acute hepatic encephalopathy may exhibit characteristic regions of involvement on FLAIR with DWI findings that can be reversible. The MR imaging extent on FLAIR and DWI strongly correlates with the maximal PAL, and PAL correlates well with the clinical outcome. Diffuse cortical involvement has a higher potential for neurologic sequelae but can be reversible.
SUBMITTER: McKinney AM
PROVIDER: S-EPMC7966093 | biostudies-literature |
REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature