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Query: UMLS:C0264733 (ventricular dilatation)
2,163 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Cranial computed tomography (CT) was performed in 12 patients with anorexia nervosa, revealing that the majority of the patients displayed ventricular dilatation and/or sulcal widening. In addition, regional cerebral blood flow (rCBF) was measured at admission and once again after weight gain, using xenon-133 dynamic single-photon emission tomography (dSPECT). The mean flow rates assessed at the first examination did not significantly differ from those assessed at the second examination and from those of a control group. There was a significant inverse relationship between the size of the cerebrospinal fluid spaces and the cerebral blood flow in the anorectics; a decrease in ventricular size after weight gain was associated with an increase in cerebral blood flow in this area. This finding, however, has to be interpreted with caution, as partial volume effects render the flow rates ambiguous in brain areas, which, in addition to neuronal tissue, also include ventricular and sulcal structures.
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PMID:Brain morphology and regional cerebral blood flow in anorexia nervosa. 278 21

Cranial computed tomography (CT) was performed in 12 patients with anorexia nervosa revealing that the majority of the patients displayed ventricular dilatation and/or sulcal widening. In six patients re-examined these structural brain alterations showed a strong trendency towards normalization after weight gain. With the intention of finding a functional correlate of the CT abnormalities, the regional cerebral blood flow (rCBF) was measured at admission and once again after weight gain and compared with the flow rates of a healthy control group. The mean flow rates assessed at the first examination did not significantly differ from those assessed at the second examination and from those of a control group. Thus, despite the CT findings of structural brain abnormalities, the measurement of the regional cerebral blood flow gave no hint of a reduced functioning of certain brain areas in anorexia nervosa.
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PMID:[Brain structure and brain function in anorexia nervosa: a computerized tomography study]. 278 95

Computed tomographic (CT) brain scans were performed in 50 inpatients with bulimia nervosa, 50 anorectic inpatients, and 50 age-matched control subjects. A number of patients with bulimia nervosa had enlarged ventricles and/or sulcal widening, but the degree and frequency of ventricular dilatation and sulcal widening were not so pronounced as in patients with anorexia nervosa. As the bulimic patients were of normal body weight, the CT abnormalities cannot be attributed to emaciation, which has often been suggested as the cause of abnormalities found in anorectic patients. Since many bulimic patients repeatedly attempt to lose weight by going on restrictive diets, the morphological brain alterations may reflect the endocrine and metabolic reactions to starvation--regardless of whether starvation has led to emaciation, as in the case of anorexia nervosa, or only counterbalanced the binges of high-caloric food. This assumption is supported by the finding that in both bulimic and anorectic patients ventricular size is inversely correlated with the plasma levels of triiodothyronine, a low concentration of which is an indicator for starvation.
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PMID:Structural brain abnormalities in patients with bulimia nervosa. 292 42

Computerized tomographic brain scans were completed in 50 inpatients with anorexia nervosa and were compared with an age- and sex-matched control group. Seventy percent of the anorectic patients displayed enlarged lateral ventricles. There was a close link between ventricular size and low weight, but not between ventricular size and duration of the eating disorder. In addition, sulcal widening was observed more frequently in patients with enlarged ventricles than in patients without these structural changes. After weight gain, a statistically significant decrease in ventricular dilatation could be observed even when mean ventricular size still far exceeded that of the control subjects. The analysis of the endocrine and metabolic parameters, known to be indicators for the process of starvation, revealed a significant inverse correlation between triiodothyronine and ventricular size. Various possible pathogenetic mechanisms for the morphological brain alterations in patients with eating disorders are discussed.
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PMID:Endocrine, metabolic, and cranial computed tomographic findings in anorexia nervosa. 334 67

Cranial computerized tomography scan was used to study 16 cases of anorexia nervosa. The effect of treatment was explored by a second computerized tomography scan in 9 of the cases. Enlargement of cortical sulci and/or ventricular dilatation were demonstrated in 14 patients (87.5%). It was shown that the amelioration of body weight was related to the reversibility of computerized tomography scan abnormalities in 8 cases (89%). The authors discuss different aetiological hypotheses explaining these findings. They attempt to clear out the importance of the cranial computerized tomography in this disorder.
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PMID:[Cerebral x-ray computed tomography in anorexia nervosa. Study of 16 cases]. 374 19