Kamal Haris, Fine Edward J, Shakibajahromi Banafsheh, Mowla Ashkan
Department of Neurology, University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston, Houston, Texas, USA.
Department of Neurology, State University of New York at Buffalo, Buffalo, New York, USA.
Curr J Neurol. 2020 Jul 5;19(3):131-137. doi: 10.18502/cjn.v19i3.5426.
This publication reviews the steps in the path towards obtaining a complete image of the brain. Up to the 1920s, plain X-ray films could demonstrate only calcified tumors, shifts in midline position of a calcified pineal gland due to a mass in the cranium, or foreign metallic objects within the skull. Walter Dandy reported in 1918 that he visualized cerebral ventricles by introducing air as a contrast agent through a trocar into one of the occipital lobes or the right frontal horn of the ventricular system. Dandy localized lesions that distorted or shifted the ventricles. In 1920, Dandy placed air by lumbar puncture into the spinal subarachnoid space that could visualize the brain and entire ventricles. Antonio Egas Moniz with the assistance of his neurosurgeon colleague, Almeida Lima, obtained X-ray images of cerebral arteries of dogs and decapitated human heads from corpses after injecting strontium bromide into their carotid arteries. Satisfied by these experiments, Moniz injected strontium bromide directly into carotid arteries of five patients which failed to show intracranial vessels. In the sixth patient, intracranial arteries were outlined but that patient died of cerebral thrombosis presumably due to the hyper-osmolality of that contrast agent. Finally, on June 18, 1927, Moniz injected 22% sodium iodine into a 20-year-old man and obtained clear visualization of his carotid artery and intracerebral branches after temporarily occluding the artery with a ligature. Direct percutaneous puncture of the cervical carotid artery remained the primary technique unto the 1960s to visualize intracranial blood vessels until Seldinger's technique was introduced in 1953. Computerized axial tomography (CAT) and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) replaced cerebral arteriography for localizing tumors and epidural or subdural hemorrhage. However, angiography is used currently for embolization of aneurysms and removal of thrombi or emboli in patients with acute stroke.
本出版物回顾了获取完整脑部图像的历程中的各个步骤。到20世纪20年代,普通X线片仅能显示钙化肿瘤、因颅内肿块导致的钙化松果体中线位置偏移,或颅骨内的金属异物。沃尔特·丹迪在1918年报告称,他通过套管针将空气作为造影剂引入枕叶之一或脑室系统的右额叶角,从而使脑室显影。丹迪定位了使脑室变形或移位的病变。1920年,丹迪通过腰椎穿刺将空气注入脊髓蛛网膜下腔,从而使脑部和整个脑室显影。安东尼奥·埃加斯·莫尼斯在其神经外科同事阿尔梅达·利马的协助下,在向狗和尸体的断头注入溴化锶后,获得了脑动脉的X线图像。对这些实验感到满意后,莫尼斯将溴化锶直接注入了五名患者的颈动脉,但未能显示颅内血管。在第六名患者中,颅内动脉轮廓显现,但该患者死于脑血栓形成,可能是由于该造影剂的高渗性所致。最后,在1927年6月18日,莫尼斯向一名20岁男子注入了22%的碘化钠,并在使用结扎线暂时阻断动脉后,清晰地显示了其颈动脉和脑内分支。直到1953年引入塞尔丁格技术之前,直接经皮穿刺颈总动脉一直是20世纪60年代之前可视化颅内血管的主要技术。计算机断层扫描(CAT)和磁共振成像(MRI)取代了脑动脉造影用于定位肿瘤和硬膜外或硬膜下出血。然而,目前血管造影用于动脉瘤栓塞以及急性卒中患者血栓或栓子的清除。