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FGFR3-related condition: a skeletal dysplasia with similarities to thanatophoric dysplasia and SADDAN due to Lys650Met [Case Report]

Farmakis, Shannon G; Shinawi, Marwan; Miller-Thomas, Michelle; Radmanesh, Alireza; Herman, Thomas E
Mutations in the fibroblast growth factor receptor 3 (FGFR3) gene account for six related skeletal dysplasia conditions: achondroplasia, hypochondroplasia, thanatophoric dysplasia types 1 and 2, SADDAN (severe achondroplasia with developmental delay and acanthosis nigricans), and platyspondylic lethal skeletal dysplasia, San Diego type. This group of disorders has very characteristic clinical and radiologic features, which distinguish them from other skeletal dysplasias. They display a spectrum of severity in the skeletal findings, ranging from relatively mild hypochondroplasia to lethal thanatophoric dysplasia. We report a patient who has the missense FGFR3 mutation, Lys650Met, previously reported in association only with SADDAN, who exhibits some findings similar to both thanatophoric dysplasia (types 1 and 2) in addition to those findings characteristic of SADDAN.
PMID: 25119967
ISSN: 1432-2161
CID: 2061872

3-C Ritscher-Schinzel syndrome with spinal subarachnoid cyst

Sargar, K M; Radmanesh, A; Herman, T E; Siegel, M J
PMID: 25712599
ISSN: 1476-5543
CID: 4243852

Comparison of seeding methods for visualization of the corticospinal tracts using single tensor tractography

Radmanesh, Alireza; Zamani, Amir A; Whalen, Stephen; Tie, Yanmei; Suarez, Ralph O; Golby, Alexandra J
OBJECTIVES: To compare five different seeding methods to delineate hand, foot, and lip components of the corticospinal tract (CST) using single tensor tractography. METHODS: We studied five healthy subjects and 10 brain tumor patients. For each subject, we used five different seeding methods, from (1) cerebral peduncle (CP), (2) posterior limb of the internal capsule (PLIC), (3) white matter subjacent to functional MRI activations (fMRI), (4) whole brain and then selecting the fibers that pass through both fMRI and CP (WBF-CP), and (5) whole brain and then selecting the fibers that pass through both fMRI and PLIC (WBF-PLIC). Two blinded neuroradiologists rated delineations as anatomically successful or unsuccessful tractography. The proportions of successful trials from different methods were compared by Fisher's exact test. RESULTS: To delineate hand motor tract, seeding through fMRI activation areas was more effective than through CP (p<0.01), but not significantly different from PLIC (p>0.1). WBF-CP delineated hand motor tracts in a larger proportion of trials than CP alone (p<0.05). Similarly, WBF-PLIC depicted hand motor tracts in a larger proportion of trials than PLIC alone (p<0.01). Foot motor tracts were delineated in all trials by either PLIC or whole brain seeding (WBF-CP and WBF-PLIC). Seeding from CP or fMRI activation resulted in foot motor tract visualization in 87% of the trials (95% confidence interval: 60-98%). The lip motor tracts were delineated only by WBF-PLIC and in 36% of trials (95% confidence interval: 11-69%). CONCLUSIONS: Whole brain seeding and then selecting the tracts that pass through two anatomically relevant ROIs can delineate more plausible hand and lip motor tracts than seeding from a single ROI. Foot motor tracts can be successfully delineated regardless of the seeding method used.
PMCID:4298470
PMID: 25532134
ISSN: 1872-6968
CID: 2061892

Relationship of syrinx size and tonsillar descent to spinal deformity in Chiari malformation Type I with associated syringomyelia

Godzik, Jakub; Kelly, Michael P; Radmanesh, Alireza; Kim, David; Holekamp, Terrence F; Smyth, Matthew D; Lenke, Lawrence G; Shimony, Joshua S; Park, Tae Sung; Leonard, Jeffrey; Limbrick, David D
OBJECT: Chiari malformation Type I (CM-I) is a developmental abnormality often associated with a spinal syrinx. Patients with syringomyelia are known to have an increased risk of scoliosis, yet the influence of specific radiographically demonstrated features on the prevalence of scoliosis remains unclear. The primary objective of the present study was to investigate the relationship of maximum syrinx diameter and tonsillar descent to the presence of scoliosis in patients with CM-I-associated syringomyelia. A secondary objective was to explore the role of craniovertebral junction (CVJ) characteristics as additional risk factors for scoliosis. METHODS: The authors conducted a retrospective review of pediatric patients evaluated for CM-I with syringomyelia at a single institution in the period from 2000 to 2012. Syrinx morphology and CVJ parameters were evaluated with MRI, whereas the presence of scoliosis was determined using standard radiographic criteria. Multiple logistic regression was used to analyze radiological features that were independently associated with scoliosis. RESULTS: Ninety-two patients with CM-I and syringomyelia were identified. The mean age was 10.5 +/- 5 years. Thirty-five (38%) of 92 patients had spine deformity; 23 (66%) of these 35 patients were referred primarily for deformity, and 12 (34%) were diagnosed with deformity during workup for other symptoms. Multiple regression analysis revealed maximum syrinx diameter > 6 mm (OR 12.1, 95% CI 3.63-40.57, p < 0.001) and moderate (5-12 mm) rather than severe (> 12 mm) tonsillar herniation (OR 7.64, 95% CI 2.3-25.31, p = 0.001) as significant predictors of spine deformity when controlling for age, sex, and syrinx location. CONCLUSIONS: The current study further elucidates the association between CM-I and spinal deformity by defining specific radiographic characteristics associated with the presence of scoliosis. Specifically, patients presenting with larger maximum syrinx diameters (> 6 mm) have an increased risk of scoliosis.
PMCID:4141637
PMID: 24527859
ISSN: 1933-0715
CID: 2061902

Superior Mesenteric Artery Syndrome: A Rare Cause of Acute Pancreatitis [Meeting Abstract]

Shroff, Sagar; Kushnir, Vladimir; Wani, Sachin; Abdeen, Basem; Radmanesh, Alireza; Menias, Christine; Azar, Riad
ISI:000208839700213
ISSN: 1572-0241
CID: 2063242

A combined fMRI and DTI examination of functional language lateralization and arcuate fasciculus structure: Effects of degree versus direction of hand preference

Propper, Ruth E; O'Donnell, Lauren J; Whalen, Stephen; Tie, Yanmei; Norton, Isaiah H; Suarez, Ralph O; Zollei, Lilla; Radmanesh, Alireza; Golby, Alexandra J
The present study examined the relationship between hand preference degree and direction, functional language lateralization in Broca's and Wernicke's areas, and structural measures of the arcuate fasciculus. Results revealed an effect of degree of hand preference on arcuate fasciculus structure, such that consistently-handed individuals, regardless of the direction of hand preference, demonstrated the most asymmetric arcuate fasciculus, with larger left versus right arcuate, as measured by DTI. Functional language lateralization in Wernicke's area, measured via fMRI, was related to arcuate fasciculus volume in consistent-left-handers only, and only in people who were not right hemisphere lateralized for language; given the small sample size for this finding, future investigation is warranted. Results suggest handedness degree may be an important variable to investigate in the context of neuroanatomical asymmetries.
PMCID:2880216
PMID: 20378231
ISSN: 1090-2147
CID: 2061912

Threshold-independent functional MRI determination of language dominance: a validation study against clinical gold standards

Suarez, Ralph O; Whalen, Stephen; Nelson, Aaron P; Tie, Yanmei; Meadows, Mary-Ellen; Radmanesh, Alireza; Golby, Alexandra J
Functional MRI (fMRI) is often used for presurgical language lateralization. In the most common approach, a laterality index (LI) is calculated on the basis of suprathreshold voxels. However, strong dependencies between LI and threshold can diminish the effectiveness of this technique; in this study we investigated an original methodology that is independent of threshold. We compared this threshold-independent method against the common threshold-dependent method in 14 patients with epilepsy who underwent Wada testing. In addition, clinical results from electrocortical language mapping and postoperative language findings were used to assess the validity of the fMRI lateralization method. The threshold-dependent methodology yielded ambiguous or incongruent lateralization outcomes in 4 of 14 patients in the inferior frontal gyrus (IFG) and in 6 of 14 patients in the supramarginal gyrus (SMG). Conversely, the threshold-independent method yielded unambiguous lateralization in all the patients tested, and demonstrated lateralization outcomes incongruent with clinical standards in 2 of 14 patients in IFG and in 1 of 14 patients in SMG. This validation study demonstrates that the threshold-dependent LI calculation is prone to significant within-patient variability that could render results unreliable; the threshold-independent method can generate distinct LIs that are more concordant with gold standard clinical findings.
PMCID:2758322
PMID: 19733509
ISSN: 1525-5069
CID: 2061922

Comparison of blocked and event-related fMRI designs for pre-surgical language mapping

Tie, Yanmei; Suarez, Ralph O; Whalen, Stephen; Radmanesh, Alireza; Norton, Isaiah H; Golby, Alexandra J
Language functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) is a promising non-invasive technique for pre-surgical planning in patients whose lesions are adjacent to or within critical language areas. Most language fMRI studies in patients use blocked experimental design. In this study, we compared a blocked design and a rapid event-related design with a jittered inter-stimulus-interval (ISI) (or stochastic design) for language fMRI in six healthy controls, and eight brain tumor patients, using a vocalized antonym generation task. Comparisons were based on visual inspection of fMRI activation maps and degree of language lateralization, both of which were assessed at a constant statistical threshold for each design. The results indicated a relatively high degree of discordance between the two task designs. In general, the event-related design provided maps with more robust activations in the putative language areas than the blocked design, especially for brain tumor patients. Our results suggest that the rapid event-related design has potential for providing comparable or even higher detection power over the blocked design for localizing language function in brain tumor patients, and therefore may be able to generate more sensitive language maps. More patient studies, and further investigation and optimization of language fMRI paradigms will be needed to determine the utility and validity of this approach for pre-surgical planning.
PMCID:3036974
PMID: 19101639
ISSN: 1095-9572
CID: 2061932

Resolving crossings in the corticospinal tract by two-tensor streamline tractography: Method and clinical assessment using fMRI

Qazi, Arish A; Radmanesh, Alireza; O'Donnell, Lauren; Kindlmann, Gordon; Peled, Sharon; Whalen, Stephen; Westin, Carl-Fredrik; Golby, Alexandra J
An inherent drawback of the traditional diffusion tensor model is its limited ability to provide detailed information about multidirectional fiber architecture within a voxel. This leads to erroneous fiber tractography results in locations where fiber bundles cross each other. This may lead to the inability to visualize clinically important tracts such as the lateral projections of the corticospinal tract. In this report, we present a deterministic two-tensor eXtended Streamline Tractography (XST) technique, which successfully traces through regions of crossing fibers. We evaluated the method on simulated and in vivo human brain data, comparing the results with the traditional single-tensor and with a probabilistic tractography technique. By tracing the corticospinal tract and correlating with fMRI-determined motor cortex in both healthy subjects and patients with brain tumors, we demonstrate that two-tensor deterministic streamline tractography can accurately identify fiber bundles consistent with anatomy and previously not detected by conventional single-tensor tractography. When compared to the dense connectivity maps generated by probabilistic tractography, the method is computationally efficient and generates discrete geometric pathways that are simple to visualize and clinically useful. Detection of crossing white matter pathways can improve neurosurgical visualization of functionally relevant white matter areas.
PMCID:2746909
PMID: 18657622
ISSN: 1095-9572
CID: 2061942

Methylmalonic acidemia: brain imaging findings in 52 children and a review of the literature

Radmanesh, Alireza; Zaman, Talieh; Ghanaati, Hossein; Molaei, Sanaz; Robertson, Richard L; Zamani, Amir A
BACKGROUND: Methylmalonic acidemia (MMA) is an autosomal-recessive inborn error of metabolism. OBJECTIVE: To recognize the CT and MR brain sectional imaging findings in children with MMA. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Brain imaging studies (47 MR and 5 CT studies) from 52 children were reviewed and reported by a neuroradiologist. The clinical data were collected for each patient. RESULTS: The most common findings were ventricular dilation (17 studies), cortical atrophy (15), periventricular white matter abnormality (12), thinning of the corpus callosum (8), subcortical white matter abnormality (6), cerebellar atrophy (4), basal ganglionic calcification (3), and myelination delay (3). The brain images in 14 patients were normal. CONCLUSION: Radiological findings of MMA are nonspecific. A constellation of common clinical and radiological findings should raise the suspicion of MMA.
PMID: 18636250
ISSN: 0301-0449
CID: 2061952