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Cerebral Amyloid Angiopathy-related inflammation (CAA-ri) is a rare and sometimes aggressive autoimmune encephalopathy caused by immune reaction directed to the beta-amyloid protein in cerebral small vessels. It has been described in the main cerebral amyloid-related diseases, cerebral amyloid angiopathy (CAA) and Alzheimer’s Disease (AD) as a spontaneous occurrence and a phenomenon triggered by immunological therapy in recent trials for AD. Indeed there are several similarities between the clinic-radiological syndrome described in CAA (CAA-ri) and the neuroradiological phenomenon described in AD patients as Amyloid-Related Imaging Abnormalities (ARIA). CAA-ri is probably underdiagnosed because many CAA patients are elderly and cognitively impaired before CAA-ri occurrence. In some cases a missed diagnosis means a missed possibility of treatment because in its most striking form it is known as steroid-responsive dementia. The clinical expression of CAA-ri is characterized by the acute/subacute onset of neurological symptoms, accompanied by the neuroimaging evidence of cerebral vasogenic edema on FLAIR-MR sequences, and cortical-subcortical microbleeds (MBs) and/or cortical superficial siderosis (CSS) on T2*-weighted gradient echo (T2*-GRE) or susceptibility weighted imaging (SWI). CSS is a marker of CAA included in modified Boston criteria for CAA diagnosis and it represents a neuroradiological sign highly specific of CAA and associated to an even higher ICH risk than MBs. Atypical forms of CAA-RI have also been reported including radiologically isolated CAA-ri, minimally symptomatic CAA-RI, CAA-RI with isolated leptomeningitis, and CAA-RI without MBs. There is a well-defined set of clinic-radiological criteria, validated vs hysto-pathological examination with a sensitivity of 82% and a specificity of 97% for the category of probable CAA-ri. The main differential diagnosis is represented by neoplastic, infectious, or other even more rare causes
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