Potentially Reversible and Recognizable Acute Encephalopathic Syndromes: Disease Categorization and MRI Appearances.
Alexander M McKinneyPublished in: AJNR. American journal of neuroradiology (2020)
"Encephalopathy" is a vague term that encompasses varying definitions, often with a nonspecific clinical presentation and numerous possible pathophysiologic causes. Hence, MR imaging plays a crucial role in the early diagnosis and treatment by identifying imaging patterns when there is limited clinical history in such patients with acute encephalopathy. The aim of this review was to aid in remembrance of etiologies of potentially reversible acute encephalopathic syndromes on MR imaging. The differential includes vascular (reversible cerebral vasoconstriction syndrome, transient global amnesia, disseminated intravascular coagulation, and thrombotic microangiopathy), infection (meningitis, encephalitis), toxic (posterior reversible encephalopathy syndrome, acute toxic leukoencephalopathy; carbon monoxide, alcohol-related, medication- and illicit drug-related toxic encephalopathies), autoimmune, metabolic (osmotic demyelination syndrome, uremic, acute hepatic encephalopathy), idiopathic/inflammatory (stroke-like migraine attacks after radiation therapy syndrome), neoplasm-related encephalopathy, and seizure-related encephalopathy.
Keyphrases
- liver failure
- drug induced
- early onset
- respiratory failure
- radiation therapy
- aortic dissection
- case report
- contrast enhanced
- magnetic resonance imaging
- squamous cell carcinoma
- computed tomography
- multiple sclerosis
- emergency department
- hepatitis b virus
- cerebral ischemia
- magnetic resonance
- extracorporeal membrane oxygenation
- radiation induced
- locally advanced
- diffusion weighted imaging
- preterm birth