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. 2022 Aug 30;32(4):510–522. doi: 10.1055/s-0042-1755250

Fig. 7.

Fig. 7

Microhemorrhages with leukoencephalopathy: upper row: SWI ( a, b ) and FLAIR ( c ) images in an 11-year-old girl with MIS-C (case 16) showing microhemorrhages ( white arrows ) in subcortical white matter of bilateral parieto-occipital regions and splenium of corpus callosum without FLAIR signal changes. Middle row: SWI ( d, e ), DWI ( f ), and coronal T2W ( g ) images showing diffuse microhemorrhages ( white arrows ) in bilateral cerebral and cerebellar hemispheres, corpus callosum, and brainstem in a 6.5-year-old boy with MIS-C (case 15) with restricted diffusion in bilateral cerebral hemispheric white matter and corpus callosum, which is hyperintense on T2W image ( yellow arrows ). Lower row: axial SWI ( h, i ), FLAIR ( j, k ), and DWI ( l ) images in a 7-year-old girl (case 7) showing periventricular location of microhemorrhages with confluent hyperintense signal in bilateral cerebral and cerebellar white matter with restricted diffusion in cerebellum ( blue arrows ).