Publication | Closed Access
MR imaging of Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease.
259
Citations
0
References
1996
Year
Although approximately 20% of the patients did not have MR imaging abnormalities, MR imaging did show signal intensity alterations due to gliosis and spongiform changes early in the course of CJD in the remaining 80%. The demonstration of bilateral areas of increased signal intensity that predominantly affected the caudate nuclei and the putamina on long-repetition-time MR images in an elderly patient with rapidly progressive dementia represents a specific finding and clearly should suggest the diagnosis of CJD.