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. 2017 Sep 27;14(6):5554–5556. doi: 10.3892/etm.2017.5212

Figure 1.

Figure 1.

MRI findings performed at (A-C) 2 h after the epileptic episode, and (D-F) 10 days after admission. The lesion in double occipital parietal cortex and subcortical exhibited a gyrus-like or patchy signal. At 2 h after the epileptic episode, MRI revealed (A) long signal on T2W1 and local shallow cerebral sulci, (B) long signal on T1W1 and local shallow cerebral sulci, (C) high signal on FLAIR and local shallow cerebral sulci. MRI following the treatment exhibited (D) equal T1, (E) long T2 and (F) high FLAIR signals. These signals indicated the presence of cerebrocellular edema and the lesion area was reduced in size compared with that 2 h after the epileptic episode. Red arrows indicate the lesion area. MRI, magnetic resonance imaging; FLAIR, fluid attenuation inversion recovery.