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American Journal of Neuroradiology | 2015

Current Applications of MRI-Guided Laser Interstitial Thermal Therapy in the Treatment of Brain Neoplasms and Epilepsy: A Radiologic and Neurosurgical Overview

R. Medvid; Armando Ruiz; R.J. Komotar; J.R. Jagid; M.E. Ivan; R.M. Quencer; M.B. Desai

SUMMARY: Minimally invasive stereotactic tumor ablation is a viable option for the treatment of benign and malignant intracranial lesions. Although surgical excision constitutes first-line therapy for various brain pathologies, it can cause irreversible neurologic deficits. Additionally, many patients who may benefit from surgery do not qualify as surgical candidates due to multiple comorbidities. Recent advancements in laser interstitial thermal therapy, namely the ability to monitor ablation in real-time under MR imaging, have improved the safety and efficacy of the procedure. MRI-guided laser interstitial thermal therapy is currently used as a minimally invasive treatment for brain metastases, radiation necrosis, glioma, and epilepsy. This article will discuss the principles, suggested indications, complications, and imaging characteristics of MRI-guided laser interstitial thermal therapy as they pertain to the treatment of brain pathology.


Journal of Computer Assisted Tomography | 1996

MR of Toxoplasma encephalitis : Signal characteristics on T2-weighted images and pathologic correlation

T. C. Brightbill; M. Judith Donovan Post; George T. Hensley; Armando Ruiz

PURPOSE Our goal was to determine if there are any T2-weighted MR signal characteristics of Toxoplasma encephalitis that might be useful in diagnosis and/or in gauging the effectiveness of medical therapy. METHOD We retrospectively analyzed the MR, CT, thallium-201 SPECT brain scans, and medical records of 27 patients with medically proven (26) and biopsy proven (1) Toxoplasma encephalitis, supplemented by autopsy findings in 4 additional patients, 2 of whom had postmortem MR correlation. The neuropathologic literature was also reviewed. RESULTS Among the 27 patients, we discovered three distinct imaging patterns. Ten (37%) patients had predominantly T2-weighted hyperintense lesions and had been on medical therapy an average of 3 days (excluding one outlier). Ten (37%) patients had T2-weighted isointense lesions and had received medical therapy an average of 61 days. Seven (26%) patients had lesions with mixed signal on T2-weighted images and had been on treatment an average of 6 days. Analysis of autopsy material from the four additional patients revealed the presence of organizing abscesses in three and necrotizing encephalitis in one, while the patient who had a brain biopsy demonstrated both types of pathologic lesions. In both cases having postmortem MRI, organizing abscesses appeared isointense to hypointense on T2-weighted images. CONCLUSION There is a definite variation in the appearance of lesions of Toxoplasma encephalitis on T2-weighted images that precludes a definitive diagnosis based on signal characteristics alone. Pathologically, our data suggest that T2-weighted hyperintensity correlates with necrotizing encephalitis and T2-weighted isointensity with organizing abscesses. Furthermore, in patients on medical therapy the T2-weighted MR appearance may be a transition from hyperintensity to isointensity as a function of a positive response to antibiotic treatment, indicating that the signal change might be used to gauge the effectiveness of medical therapy.


Pediatric Neurology | 1996

Lyme neuroborreliosis masquerading as a brainstem tumor in a 15-year-old

Richard G. Curless; Norman J. Schatz; Brian C. Bowen; Zoe Rodriguez; Armando Ruiz

A 15-year-old boy had onset of unilateral facial weakness. A few days later, he experienced mild vertigo, double vision, and headache. Examination confirmed a peripheral right seventh nerve weakness in addition to an internuclear ophthalmoplegia. The neurologic features suggested a pontine glioma. A T2-weighted MRI scan revealed demyelinating lesions in the pons and in several areas of the cerebrum, including the periventricular region. Subsequent history revealed that he had been diagnosed with Lyme arthritis 7 years earlier while living in Connecticut. The radiographic studies favored a diagnosis of multiple sclerosis. However, studies of blood and cerebrospinal fluid established a diagnosis of Lyme neuroborreliosis.


Case Reports | 2015

Deep brain stimulation complicated by bilateral large cystic cavitation around the leads in a patient with Parkinson's disease.

Jagid J; Madhavan K; Amade Bregy; Mehul Desai; Armando Ruiz; Quencer R; Landy Hj

Deep brain stimulation (DBS) is an approved and effective therapy for patients suffering from advanced Parkinsons disease (PD). Several clinical trials have indicated significant motor function improvement in patients undergoing subthalamic nucleus stimulation. This therapy is, rarely, associated with complications, mostly related to infections, seizures or stimulation-induced side effects. We report a case of a 71-year-old man with a 10-year history of PD who underwent bilateral placement of subthalamic nucleus DBS. As a complication, the patient showed subjective postoperative cognitive decline, and subsequent MRI showed peri-lead oedema, which progressed to large cystic cavitation around the leads without indication of infection. The patient received steroid therapy and the cavitations regressed without surgical intervention.


Operative Neurosurgery | 2017

Visual deficit from laser interstitial thermal therapy for temporal lobe epilepsy: Anatomical considerations

Walter J. Jermakowicz; Michael E. Ivan; Iahn Cajigas; Ramses Ribot; Ignacio Jusué-Torres; Mehul Desai; Armando Ruiz; Pierre-François D’Haese; Andres M. Kanner; Jonathan Jagid

BACKGROUND Laser interstitial thermal therapy (LITT) is quickly emerging as an effective surgical therapy for temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE). One of the most frequent complications of the procedure is postoperative visual field cuts, but the physiopathology of these deficits is unknown. OBJECTIVE To evaluate potential causes of visual deficits after LITT for TLE in an attempt to minimize this complication. METHODS This retrospective chart review compares the case of a 24-year-old male who developed homonymous hemianopsia following LITT for TLE to 17 prior patients who underwent the procedure and suffered no visual deficit. We examined both features of the surgical approach (trajectory, laser energy, ablation size) and of preoperative surgical anatomy, derived from volumetric tracings of mesiotemporal structures. RESULTS For the patient with postoperative homonymous hemianopsia imaging suggested inadvertent ablation of the lateral geniculate nucleus, although the laser was positioned entirely within the hippocampus. This patients laser trajectory, ablation number, energy delivered, and ablation size were not significantly different from the prior patients. However, the subject with the visual deficit did have significantly smaller choroidal fissure cerebrospinal fluid volume. CONCLUSION Visual deficits are the most common complication of LITT for mesiotemporal epilepsy and patients at most risk may have small cerebrospinal fluid volume in the choroidal fissure, allowing heat to spread from the hippocampal body to the lateral geniculate nucleus. When such anatomy is identified on preoperative magnetic resonance imaging, we recommend lowering laser trajectory, decreasing ablation power through the hippocampal body, and using temperature safety markers at the lower thalamic border.


Cureus | 2018

Preliminary Experience on Laser Interstitial Thermal Ablation Therapy in the Treatment of Extra-axial Masses: Indications, Imaging Characterization and Outcomes

Armando Ruiz; Roberto J. Diaz; Simon Buttrick; Michael E. Ivan; Mehul Desai; Ricardo J. Komotar; Rostislav Medvid

Laser thermal ablation is a novel minimally invasive neurosurgical technique that has proven to be beneficial in the treatment of a select group of neurosurgical conditions such as primary brain neoplasms, brain metastases, radiation necrosis, and epileptogenic lesions such as cortical dysplasia and mesial temporal sclerosis. The applicability of laser thermal ablation and its utility in the treatment of extra-axial (EA) brain neoplasms, mainly meningioma, is another novel use of this technique. Our article discusses the use and benefits of this technique in this particular clinical scenario. We describe our experience in a group of symptomatic patients from our institution with EA masses, mainly recurrent meningiomas, that failed previous more conventional treatment therapies such as surgery and radiotherapy. Our paper emphasizes patient selection, indications for the procedure, and post-treatment imaging characteristics of the ablated lesions.


Journal of Computer Assisted Tomography | 1997

Dentate nuclei involvement in AIDS patients with CNS cryptococcosis : Imaging findings with pathologic correlation

Armando Ruiz; M. Judith Donovan Post; Claudia Cunha Bundschu


American Journal of Neuroradiology | 1998

Thallium-201 brain SPECT of lymphoma in AIDS patients: pitfalls and technique optimization.

L S Kessler; Armando Ruiz; M. J. Donovan Post; Ganz Wi; A H Brandon; J N Foss


Neurology | 2018

Reversible Lesions of the Corpus Callosum in Migraine with Aura: a Case Study and Review of the Literature (P3.096)

Richard Lewis; Teshamae Monteith; Armando Ruiz


Applied Radiology | 1996

Traumatic thoracic and lumbar fractures

Armando Ruiz; M. Judith Donovan Post; Evelyn Sklar

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