CCLEAR7T

Copenhagen Cerebrospinal fluid Leak Evaluation of mAgnetic Resonance imaging at 7T

Project Details

Spontaneous intracranial hypotension (SIH) is a severe neurological disease where cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) leakage in the spine causes orthostatic headache, cognitive dysfunction, tinnitus, mental dullness, diplopia and, in worst cases, coma. Yet, if correctly diagnosed, it is a fully treatable disease. If the clinical suspicion of SIH is lacking, a multitude of scans, misdiagnoses and fatal diagnostic delays are the result. The estimated annual incidence rate is at least 5 per 100,000 in the general population, close to other serious neurological disorders such as subarachnoid hemorrhage. Several epidemiological and pathophysiological aspects of SIH are currently unexplored.

The CCLEAR7T is a collaboration between DRCMR and Danish Headache Center to use ultra-high field MRI in combination with a newly developed MRI sequence, CSF-STREAM, to measure CSF circulation as well as structural alterations in fine CSF pathways around the brain. We aim to gain new and unique knowledge on how the brain and CSF regulation are altered when SIH causes a decrease in intracranial pressure and how and whether these alterations are reversed upon following successful treatment. Due to its mechanical nature and simple reversibility, SIH is a unique condition to study CSF dynamics and their influence on brain waste clearance pathways safely in humans. The results will also serve as input for developing a state-of-the-art diagnostic evaluation of SIH.

Project Leader

Kristian Nygaard Mortensen

kristiannm@drcmr.dk
+45 3862 0505

Project Members

Henrik Lundell

lundell@drcmr.dk
+45 3862 0633

Kristin Engel

kristine@drcmr.dk

Rasmus Hvass Hansen

rasmushh@drcmr.dk

Collaborators

Associate Prof. Henrik Winther Schytz

Danish Headache Center
Copenhagen University Hospital Rigshospitalet

Dr. Sebastian Dalby

Danish Headche Center
Copenhagen University Hospital Rigshospitalet

Dr. Tobias Christian Clausen

Danish Headache Center

Prof. Thijs van Osch

Leiden University Medical Center

Assistant Prof., PhD. Lydiane Hirschler

Leiden University Medical Center

Funded By

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