Abstract

A 59-year-old man presented with sudden weakness, paresthesia, and sensory loss in both lower limbs. Sagittal magnetic resonance images demonstrated T1 isointense, T2 hyperintense non-enhancing intramedullary lesion from T3 to T6 (Fig. 1). Axial T2-weighted image revealed symmetric hyperintensities in the grey matter of anterior horns, giving the “snake eyes” sign (Fig. 2). The clinical and imaging diagnosis was spinal cord infarction. Fig. 2Axial T2-weighted magnetic resonance image showed symmetric hyperintensities in the grey matter of anterior horns of the thoracic spinal cord caused by infarction, giving the “snake eyes” sign. View Large Image Figure Viewer Download Hi-res image

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