Artigo Acesso aberto Revisado por pares

Boomerang sign: Clinical significance of transient lesion in splenium of corpus callosum

2012; Medknow; Volume: 15; Issue: 2 Linguagem: Inglês

10.4103/0972-2327.95005

ISSN

1998-3549

Autores

Ravindra Kumar Garg, HardeepSingh Malhotra, MukundR Vidhate, PawanKumar Sharma,

Tópico(s)

Infectious Diseases and Tuberculosis

Resumo

Transient signal abnormality in the splenium of corpus callosum on magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) is occasionally encountered in clinical practice. It has been reported in various clinical conditions apart from patients with epilepsy. We describe 4 patients with different etiologies presenting with signal changes in the splenium of corpus callosum. They were diagnosed as having progressive myoclonic epilepsy (case 1), localization-related epilepsy (case 2), hemicrania continua (case 3), and postinfectious parkinsonism (case 4). While three patients had complete involvement of the splenium on diffusion-weighted image ("boomerang sign"), the patient having hemicrania continua showed semilunar involvement ("mini-boomerang") on T2-weighted and FLAIR image. All the cases had noncontiguous involvement of the splenium. We herein, discuss these cases with transient splenial involvement and stress that such patients do not need aggressive diagnostic and therapeutic interventions. An attempt has been made to review the literature regarding the pathophysiology, etiology, and outcome of such lesions.

Referência(s)