Editorial on the Research Topic
Applied neuroimaging—Case report collection 2021
The reports of single patients or very small patient cohorts as ‘case reports’ are per se not a part of systematic research and might thus be regarded as of limited clinico-scientific value. However, specific findings in rare conditions can be very educative to the readership in order to teach specific insights, on the one hand into clinical or technical aspects not explorable in larger groups due to their special features, or on the other hand into distinct pathophysiological relationships. In this Frontiers in Neurology Section for Applied Neuroimaging, i.e., a Section not defined by a disease entity but by a methodological application to various neurological diseases or conditions, such a collection of case reports has additional requirements: the cases should not show a mere imaging phenomenon, but should combine specific clinical and neuroimaging features that guide in the understanding of the given neurological condition or in the use of the imaging modality in the differential diagnostic or technical context, respectively. The ultimate aim, according to the Journal's mission statement, is to inform improvements in patient care.
The four case reports that were published fulfill these criteria very well and are excellent approaches to the aims summarized in the first paragraph. With respect to the understanding of brain changes associated with hypergravity, McGregor et al. investigated the intracranial fluid changes induced by spaceflight by a report of a crewmember who first experienced an aborted launch and then subsequently completed a 6-month International Space Station mission. As a participant of a prospective neuroimaging study, the subject received MRI scans before the aborted launch and once in addition afterwards, enabling a within-subject analysis to qualitatively compare the intracranial fluid changes following the aborted launch to those associated with the subsequent spaceflight, in comparison to a control group of 12 astronauts with completed ISS missions but without aborted launch. The investigation of this extremely specific condition demonstrated that exposure to hypergravity during launch and landing did not induce lasting intracranial fluid shifts given that after the launch abort, the subject's ventricular and free water changes were within the range of the control group, and that the fluid shifts after the launch abort were smaller and in the opposite direction compared to the same subject's brain changes after the subsequent spaceflight mission. The authors conclude that persisting spaceflight-induced intracranial fluid changes are therefore most likely due to prolonged microgravity exposure and/or other spaceflight factors.
In a case report which addresses a condition from clinical work of high current interest, Lin et al. report the case of a patient with coronavirus disease (COVID-19) vaccine-induced immune thrombotic thrombocytopenia (VITT) and the MRI-based diagnosis of sinus thrombosis in the left transverse sinus, sigmoid sinus, and left distal internal jugular vein who could be successfully treated by high-dose immunoglobulin and anticoagulation therapy, with no sequelae. The case highlights the role of neuroimaging in VITT management by the detection of brain pathology including sinus thrombosis. Two further reports demonstrated how other neuroimaging modalities than MRI contribute to the aims of the Research Topic. Dong et al. describe that C-arm cone-beam computed tomography (CBCT) was able to identify neovascularization, microcalcification, and plaque rupture in a patient's carotid artery. After carotid endarterectomy, histopathology confirmed that the high-density areas in CBCT represented neovascularization and macrocalcification with linear enhancement representing plaque rupture. The authors conclude that CBCT can be used as a promising supplement to current imaging modalities to evaluate plaque components more accurately. Finally, Ikeda et al. report a patient with Alzheimer's disease, carrying the homozygous APOE ε2 allele and presenting with recurrent lobar hemorrhages, cortical superficial siderosis, and immunohistochemically confirmed vascular amyloid β who was investigated by PET and 18F-THK5351 which is recognized as a dual-purpose compound that binds to both MAO-B and tau aggregates. By this approach, PET guided in the differentiation of the brain changes by identification of MAO-B concentrated regions, astroglial activation, secondary Wallerian tract degeneration, neuroinflammation due to cerebral amyloid angiopathy-related hemorrhages, and possible tau accumulation.
In summary, these case reports demonstrate how the neuroimaging-based analysis of single patients/subjects can provide an important contribution to clinicopathological and pathophysiological relationships in neurological diseases or other conditions (like hypergravity), further encouraging the—albeit strictly quality-controlled—publication of such casuistic findings.
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Conflict of interest
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Keywords: neuroimaging, multimodality, education, structure, function
Citation: Kassubek J (2022) Editorial: Applied neuroimaging—Case report collection 2021. Front. Neurol. 13:1027252. doi: 10.3389/fneur.2022.1027252
Received: 24 August 2022; Accepted: 30 August 2022;
Published: 28 September 2022.
Edited and reviewed by: Brunno Machado De Campos, State University of Campinas, Brazil
Copyright © 2022 Kassubek. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
*Correspondence: Jan Kassubek, jan.kassubek@uni-ulm.de