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The Use of Neuroimaging in the Diagnosis of Mitochondrial Disease
Dev Disabil Res Rev 16:129-135, Friedman, S.D.,et al, 2010
See this aricle in Pubmed

Article Abstract
Magnetic resonance imaging changes may be nonspecific, such as atrophy (both general and involving specific structures, such as cerebellum), more suggestive of particular disorders such as focal and often bilateral lesions confined to deep brain nuclei, or clearly characteristic of a given disorder such as stroke-like lesions that do not respect vascular boundaries in mitochondrial myopathy, encephalopathy, lactic acidosis, and stroke-like episode (MELAS). White matter hyperintensities with or without associated gray matter involvement may also be observed. Across patients and discrete disease subtypes (e.g. MELAS, Leigh syndrome, etc.), patterns of these features are helpful for diagnosis. However, it is also true that marked variability in expression occurs in all mitochondrial disease subtypes, illustrative of the complexity of the disease process. The present preview summarizes the role of neuroimaging in the diagnosis and characterization of patients with suspected mitochondrial disease.
 
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basal ganglia,lesion of
brain atrophy
cerebrovascular accident
cerebrovascular accident,mimics
cerebrovascular accident,nonvascular territory
deep gray nuclei
gene mutation
Leigh's disease
leukoencephalopathy
MELAS syndrome
mitochondrial disease
MRI
MRI,abnormal
MRS
strokelike episodes
thalamus,lesion of
white matter disease

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