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. 2017 Jun 12;14(2):1119–1125. doi: 10.3892/etm.2017.4583

Figure 1.

Figure 1.

MRI images for CSVD. (A) (MRI FLAIR): right cerebral hemisphere (i.e., left part of the figure): leukoaraiosis (arrow), and acute cerebral infarction in left cerebral hemisphere (i.e., right part of the figure). Corresponding patient with acute cerebral infarction. (B) (MRI FLAIR): leukoaraiosis (arrow). Corresponding patient with TIA. (C) (MRI FLAIR): leukoaraiosis (arrow). Corresponding patient with TIA. (D) (MRI FLAIR): leukoaraiosis (arrow). Corresponding patient with TIA. (E) (MRI FLAIR): right cerebral hemisphere (i.e., left part of the figure): leukoaraiosis (arrow), and acute cerebral infarction in left cerebral hemisphere (i.e., right part of the figure). Corresponding patient with acute cerebral infarction. (F) (MRI FLAIR): right cerebral hemisphere (i.e., left part of the figure): leukoaraiosis (arrow), and acute cerebral infarction in left cerebral hemisphere (i.e., right part of the figure). (E and F) for the same corresponding patient with acute cerebral infarction. (G) (MRI FLAIR): LI (arrow). Corresponding patient with TIA. (H) (MRI FLAIR): bilateral LI (arrow). Corresponding patient with TIA. (I) (MRI FLAIR): bilateral LI (arrow). Corresponding patient with TIA. CSVD, cerebral small vascular disease; FLAIR, fluid attenuated inversion recovery; TIA, transient ischemic attack; LI, lacunar infarction.