• Most Popular
  • Most Shared

Health Videos

Leeches therapy industry booms

As leech therapy gains popularity, a laboratory near Moscow is boosting production of this increasingly valuable -- and slimy -- commodity.  Video 

Under the knife, without the knife

Autopsies have gone virtual thanks to Swiss forensic pathologists who are conducting about 100 ''virtopsies'' a year.  Video 

Brain abnormalities found in 1 of 8 healthy people

BOSTON
Wed Oct 31, 2007 5:11pm EDT

BOSTON (Reuters) - Thirteen percent of healthy adults were found to have some type of undiagnosed -- but likely harmless -- abnormality in the brain, according to a Dutch study published on Wednesday.

Health

The research, led by Meike Vernooij of the Erasmus MC University Medical Center in Rotterdam, is important because brain scans are becoming more common and more detailed, and doctors need to know whether to be concerned if they stumble onto something unexpected.

Vernooij and colleagues looked at MRI scans of 2,000 volunteers over the age of 45. Magnetic resonance imaging or MRI can give a detailed picture of physical brain structures.

Just over 7 percent showed evidence of a brain clot, but the clots were too small to produce symptoms and seemed to be more common with age.

Nearly 2 percent had a brain aneurysm, which is a bulge in a blood vessel that can burst if it becomes too big, causing a stroke. But 32 of the 35 aneurysms were so small, the researchers did not suggest follow-up medical treatment.

The younger volunteers were just as likely to have them as older ones.

The scans also uncovered 32 tumors. All but one were benign.

Thirteen people had more than one abnormality, Aad van der Lugt, another member of the team, said.

As MRI scans become more sensitive, they "will probably increase the number of small brain abnormalities detected" and doctors will need to know which ones can be safely ignored, the researchers wrote in the New England Journal of Medicine.

"Unfortunately, we know little of the natural course of these asymptomatic findings," Van der Lugt wrote in an e-mail.

"It may well be that the clinical course and relevance of these unexpected asymptomatic findings differ from those of similar symptomatic findings for which persons seek medical treatment," he added.

Tracking such "incidental" abnormalities "will hopefully provide more information on this that will be useful for both researchers and clinicians," he said.



More from Reuters

Photo

Plot exposes fissure in U.S. intelligence community

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Last week's failed plot to bomb a U.S. passenger jet has exposed lingering fissures within the U.S. intelligence community, which had information from interviews and clandestine intercepts but did not put the pieces together, officials said.

Traders work in the pits at the The New York Mercantile Exchange, November 7, 2007. REUTERS/Brendan McDermid

Calling the market

A spectacular credit bust, two devastating stock market crashes ... the smart call this decade was to play it safe.  Full Article 

People walk past a branch of Bank of America in New York's financial district April 28, 2009. REUTERS/Brendan McDermid

Move your money

Boycotting "too big to fail" banks is a great idea -- so long as investors remember that banks aren't the only ones responsible for the crisis.  Full Article