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New microbleed after blood-brain barrier leakage in intracerebral haemorrhage.

Koen M van NieuwenhuizenJeroen HendrikseCatharina J M Klijn
Published in: BMJ case reports (2017)
Cerebral microbleeds are increasingly recognised as biomarkers of small vessel disease. Several preclinical and clinical studies have suggested that chronic disruption of the blood-brain barrier is one of the mechanisms for the development of cerebral microbleeds.A 51-year-old man experienced two left parieto-occipital lobar intracerebral haemorrhages (ICHs) in the timespan of 2 years. Multiple microbleeds surrounding the two haemorrhages were found on MRI, but not at location distant from the haemorrhages. Ten months after the last haemorrhage, an MRI demonstrated a right occipital focus of contrast enhancement. Twenty months after the last ICH, a new cerebral microbleed had developed exactly at the location of the earlier contrast enhancement.This case demonstrates that blood-brain barrier disruption may be an important factor preceding the development of cerebral microbleeds.
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