TY - CHAP
T1 - Canavan disease
AU - Rossi, Andrea
AU - Hoffmann, Chen
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© Cambridge University Press 2012.
PY - 2010/1/1
Y1 - 2010/1/1
N2 - Specific Imaging Findings. MRI shows a diffuse leukoencephalopathy with swelling of the white matter, involving both the supratentorial and the infratentorial compartments. There is a centripetal pattern of involvement, with relative sparing of the internal capsules and corpus callosum until later stages of the disease. The affected white matter appears T1 hypointense and hyperintense on T2-weighted images, with signal approaching that of the CSF, due to diffuse spongy degeneration. The same regions are bright on DWI and dark on ADC maps, consistent with reduced diffusivity of water, compatible with intramyelinic edema. The gray matter of the thalami and globi pallidi is also involved, whereas the caudate nuclei, putamina, and claustra are spared. There is no pathological enhancement of affected structures following contrast administration. Canavan disease has a pathognomonic appearance on proton MR spectroscopy with a marked increase of the NAA peak, as a result of its accumulation within the brain tissue. Other possible and nonspecific MR spectroscopy findings include decrease of choline and creatine, increased myo-inositol levels, and presence of lactate. Pertinent Clinical Information. There are three clinical variants of Canavan disease: neonatal, infantile, and juvenile, of which the infantile (presenting by age 3–6 months) is by far the most common. Patients present with macrocrania, hypotonia, lethargy, seizures, spasticity, optic atrophy, and developmental delay. The clinical phenotype is variably severe depending on the degree of enzyme activity in individual cases.
AB - Specific Imaging Findings. MRI shows a diffuse leukoencephalopathy with swelling of the white matter, involving both the supratentorial and the infratentorial compartments. There is a centripetal pattern of involvement, with relative sparing of the internal capsules and corpus callosum until later stages of the disease. The affected white matter appears T1 hypointense and hyperintense on T2-weighted images, with signal approaching that of the CSF, due to diffuse spongy degeneration. The same regions are bright on DWI and dark on ADC maps, consistent with reduced diffusivity of water, compatible with intramyelinic edema. The gray matter of the thalami and globi pallidi is also involved, whereas the caudate nuclei, putamina, and claustra are spared. There is no pathological enhancement of affected structures following contrast administration. Canavan disease has a pathognomonic appearance on proton MR spectroscopy with a marked increase of the NAA peak, as a result of its accumulation within the brain tissue. Other possible and nonspecific MR spectroscopy findings include decrease of choline and creatine, increased myo-inositol levels, and presence of lactate. Pertinent Clinical Information. There are three clinical variants of Canavan disease: neonatal, infantile, and juvenile, of which the infantile (presenting by age 3–6 months) is by far the most common. Patients present with macrocrania, hypotonia, lethargy, seizures, spasticity, optic atrophy, and developmental delay. The clinical phenotype is variably severe depending on the degree of enzyme activity in individual cases.
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/84924659761
U2 - 10.1017/CBO9781139030854.025
DO - 10.1017/CBO9781139030854.025
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AN - SCOPUS:84924659761
SN - 9780521119443
VL - 9780521119443
SP - 49
EP - 50
BT - Brain Imaging with MRI and CT
PB - Cambridge University Press
ER -