A 61-year-old female with a past history of gastric cancer presented with altered mental status, a few seizures, and low-grade fever. Lumbar puncture revealed elevated cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) pressure, lymphocytic pleocytosis, elevated protein level, remarkably decreased glucose level, and presence of cryptococcal antigen. Cryptococcus neoformans was identified by India ink staining and culture of CSF. The patient was given antifungal agents intravenously and intrathecally. CSF findings improved and C. neoformans could not be detected in CSF one month after the onset. Cerebral sulcal hyperintensity was identified in the bilateral frontal and parietal lobes on fluid-attenuated inversion recovery (FLAIR) magnetic resonance (MR) imaging one month after the onset, but no leptomeningeal enhancement was detected in the affected sulci on T 1 -weighted MR imaging. The sulcal hyperintensity on FLAIR imaging developed in the bilateral temporal and occipital lobes 2 months after the onset. CSF findings obtained by lumbar puncture were within the normal range except for pressure. However, neurological deterioration and reconfirmation of C. neoformans in CSF indicated recurrent cryptococcal inflammation. The sulcal hyperintensity on FLAIR imaging may indicate a high CSF protein concentration in the subarachnoid space. Such cerebral sulcal hyperintensity is an unusual MR imaging finding of cryptococcal meningoencephalitis, and may be an early sign of procrastinating process or recurrent inflammation even if the findings of CSF obtained by lumbar puncture are normal.
An 80-year-old male with a history of hypertension presented with chronic subdural hematoma manifesting as progressive consciousness disturbance and left hemiparesis. T 1 -weighted and fluid attenuation inversion recovery (FLAIR) magnetic resonance imaging showed a fresh hematoma in the right subdural space with a midline shift of 15 mm. FLAIR and diffusion-weighted imaging showed a hyperintense area in the right paraventricular white matter compressed by the hematoma. Apparent diffusion coefficients (ADCs) corresponding to the hyperintense area in the central area of the affected cerebral hemisphere on FLAIR images were measured before and one month after the operation. The motion probing gradient was applied in the right-left direction to the body axis. Since the central area in the cerebrum includes nerve fibers perpendicular to the direction of the gradient, the measured ADC appeared to be anisotropic. Preoperative ADC in the right paraventricular white matter was anisotropic and greater than in age-matched normal subjects, so the edema was identified as the vasogenic type. The edema in the right paraventricular white matter resolved promptly with improvement of the midline shift and normalization of the ADC.
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