4.6 Article

Diffusion imaging may predict reversible brain lesions in eclampsia and severe preeclampsia: Initial experience

Journal

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF OBSTETRICS AND GYNECOLOGY
Volume 189, Issue 5, Pages 1350-1355

Publisher

MOSBY, INC
DOI: 10.1067/S0002-9378(03)00651-3

Keywords

eclampsia; posterior leukocncephalopathy syndrome; diffusion imaging; brain edema; magnetic resonance imaging

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OBJECTIVE: The purpose of this study was to validate diffusion-weighted magnetic resonance imaging in the prediction of the evolutive course of brain edema and to establish its pathophysiologic presence in patients with eclampsia/severe preeclampsia. STUDY DESIGN: Seventeen patients with a clinical diagnosis of severe eclampsia/preeclampsia and T2 hyperintense brain lesions on routine magnetic resonance imaging were evaluated at hospital admission and 8 weeks later. RESULTS: Brain edema was reversible in 13 patients and irreversible in 4 patients, as indicated on follow-up magnetic resonance imaging. Sixteen of 17 patients were differentiated accurately into reversible and irreversible groups on the basis of diffusion imaging on hospital admission. Diffusion-weighted magnetic resonance imaging demonstrated a significant increase in water mobility in abnormal regions compared with normal-appearing brains in patients in the reversible group (1.34 +/- 0.10 mm(2) vs 0.79 +/- 0.08 mm(2)/s x 10(-3), P < .001). In the irreversible group, restricted water diffusion was present, which was consistent with cytotoxic edema and early brain infarction in 3 of 4 patients. CONCLUSION: Diffusion-weighted magnetic resonance imaging can predict successfully the evolutive course of brain edema in an acute setting in these patients. Our findings indicate that brain edema is vasogenic, although ischemic/cytotoxic edema was observed less commonly.

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