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Dawson's fingers
Dawson's Fingers appearing on an MRI scan

Template:Search infobox Editor-In-Chief: C. Michael Gibson, M.S., M.D. [1]


"Dawson's Fingers" is a condition affecting the brain of Multiple Sclerosis patients. The condition is the result of inflammation around long axis of medular veins. This results in a finger-like appearance of the lesions extending mainly off the ventricles within the brain.

This morphologic appearance is named after the Scottish pathologist James Walker Dawson [1], who first defined the condition in 1916.

Refererences

  1. Dawson, J.W.: The histology of disseminated sclerosis. Trans Roy Soc Edinb, 50: 517, 1916.


Template:Eponymous medical signs for nervous system


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