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Microangiopathy of brain, retina, and cochlea
T2 hyperintense corpus callosum lesions in patient with clinical triad
Encephalopathy, bilateral hearing loss, and branch retinal artery occlusions
Multifocal T2 hyperintensities similar to MS
More often round, midcallosal rather than callososeptal location
May involve brainstem, basal ganglia, thalamus, subcortical white matter, centrum semiovale
Lesions may show acute diffusion restriction
Variable enhancement of lesions and leptomeninges
Multiple sclerosis
Acute disseminated encephalomyelitis (ADEM)
Systemic lupus erythematosus
Vasculitis
Microinfarctions in cerebral cortex that are generally not seen on imaging
No demyelination seen on pathology
20-40 year old (F > > M)
Sudden visual loss, deafness; headache, variable encephalopathy
Usually self-limited (2-4 years), but may lead to permanent deafness or blindness
Most patients do not exhibit entire triad (up to 97% at time of presentation)
Complete triad seen after 2 weeks or after 2 years
Consider Susac syndrome in patients with corpus callosum lesions and clinical triad
Retinocochleocerebral vasculopathy, formerly known as small infarctions of cochlear, retinal, and encephalic tissue (SICRET syndrome)
Microangiopathy of brain, retina, and cochlea
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