[1] Charidimou A, Boulouis G, Gurol ME, et al. Emerging concepts in sporadic cerebral amyloid angiopathy[J]. Brain, 2017, 140(7): 1829-1850. [2] DeSimone CV, Graff-Radford J, El-Harasis MA, et al. Cerebral amyloid angiopathy: diagnosis, clinical implications, and management strategies in atrial fibrillation[J]. J Am Coll Cardiol, 2017, 70(9): 1173-1182. [3] Cannistraro RJ, Meschia JF, et al. The clinical dilemma of anticoagulation use in patients with cerebral amyloid angiopathy and atrial fibrillation[J]. Curr Cardiol Rep, 2018, 20(11): 106. [4] Charidimou A, Frosch MP, Salman RA, et al. Advancing diagnostic criteria for sporadic cerebral amyloid angiopathy: Study protocol for a multicenter MRI-pathology validation of Boston criteria v2.0[J]. Int J Stroke, 2019: 1747493019855888. [5] Bensaidane MR, Beauregard JM, Poulin S, et al. Clinical utility of amyloid PET imaging in the differential diagnosis of atypical dementias and its impact on caregivers[J]. J Alzheimers Dis, 2016, 52(4): 1251-1262. [6] Farid K, Hong YT, Aigbirhio FI, et al. Early-phase 11C-PiB PET in amyloid angiopathy-related symptomatic cerebral hemorrhage: potential diagnostic value[J]? PLoS One, 2015, 10(10): e0139926. [7] Farid K, Charidimou A, Baron JC, et al. Amyloid positron emission tomography in sporadic cerebral amyloid angiopathy: A systematic critical update [J]. NeuroImage-Clin, 2017, 15: 247-263. [8] Folstein MF, Folstein SE, Mchugh PR, et al. “Mini-mental state”. A practical method for grading the cognitive state of patients for the clinician[J]. J Psychiatr Res, 1975, 12(3): 189-198. [9] Baron JC, Farid K, Dolan E, et al. Diagnostic utility of amyloid PET in cerebral amyloid angiopathy-related symptomatic intracerebral hemorrhage[J]. J Cerebr blood F Met, 2014, 34(5): 753-758. [10]Johnson KA, Gregas M, Becker JA, et al. Imaging of amyloid burden and distribution in cerebral amyloid angiopathy[J]. Ann Neurol, 2007. 62(3):229-234. [11]Ly JV, Donnan GA, Villemagne VL, et al. 11C-PIB binding is increased in patients with cerebral amyloid angiopathy-related hemorrhage[J]. Neurology, 2010, 74(6): 487-493. [12]Seo SW, Ayakta N, Grinberg LT, et al. Regional correlations between [(11)C]PIB PET and post-mortem burden of amyloid-beta pathology in a diverse neuropathological cohort[J]. NeuroImage Clin, 2017, 13: 130-137. [13]Gurol ME, PhD AVM, Christopher Gidicsin BA, et al. Cerebral amyloid angiopathy burden associated with leukoaraiosis: A positron emission tomography/magnetic resonance imaging study[J]. Ann Neurol, 2013, 73(4): 529. [14]Lee SH, Ryu WS, Roh JK, et al. Cerebral microbleeds are a risk factor for warfarin-related intracerebral hemorrhage[J]. Neurology, 2009, 72(2): 171-176. [15]Goos JD, Wm VDF, Knol DL, et al. Clinical relevance of improved microbleed detection by susceptibility-weighted magnetic resonance imaging[J]. Stroke, 2011, 42(7): 1894-1900. [16]Dierksen GA, Skehan ME, Khan MA, et al. Spatial relation between microbleeds and amyloid deposits in amyloid angiopathy[J]. Ann Neurol, 2010, 68(4): 545-548. [17]Gurol ME, Dierksen G, Betensky R, et al. Predicting sites of new hemorrhage with amyloid imaging in cerebral amyloid angiopathy[J]. Neurology, 2012, 79(4): 320-326. [18]Johnson KA, Gregas M, Becker JA. Imaging of amyloid burden and distribution in cerebral amyloid angiopathy[J]. Ann Neurol, 2007, 62(3): 229-34. [19]van Veluw SJ, Kuijf HJ, Charidimou A, et al. Reduced vascular amyloid burden at microhemorrhage sites in cerebral amyloid angiopathy[J]. Acta Neuropathol, 2016: 1-7. |