Status
Conditions
Treatments
About
The Cerebral Amyloid angiopathy (CAA) is the leading cause of cortical hemorrhage after 65 years. The presence of cerebral infarction is also reported anatomically in the AAC. MRI studies of these infarcts are rare. They are described as punctate, cortical silent. Frequency and pathophysiology is poorly understood. The investigators put the question of a link with hemorrhagic lesions of the AAC.
Full description
Main objective / secondary
The objectives are:
Inclusion / exclusion Any patient who was diagnosed as carrying a probable AAC according to the Boston criteria and has had a brain MRI with the following sequences: classic or enhanced diffusion (or DTI B2000), T1, T2 FLAIR, T2EG (T2 * or SWAN)
Methodology This is a non-interventional study single center, including AAC patients hospitalized in the Hospital Group Paris Saint-Joseph from May 2007 to May 2014.
Clinical patient characteristics were collected from their medical records. Patients are aware of the potential use of their data for medical research by information contained in the handbook of the institution.
Brain MRI will be proofread by a neurologist and a neuroradiologist to clarify:
Number of topics:
Enrollment
Sex
Volunteers
Inclusion criteria
Exclusion criteria
Loading...
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
Clinical trials
Research sites
Resources
Legal