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The previous chapter discussed the wave of political energy introduced into American politics by a desire to fight crime. The message resonated beyond the “street crimes” Senator Kennedy singled out in 1975, like rape and murder. Politicians also turned to the criminal justice architecture to solve society’s most vexing problems, like drug addiction, gun violence, child pornography, drunk driving, and intrafamily abuse. This approach required two components: new laws and increased enforcement. Legislators changed the laws, and they funded a hiring spree of police officers to catch people who broke those laws, prosecutors and judges to put them in jail, and correctional officers to keep them there.
The brain responds dynamically to transient episodes of ischemic insult. Standard brain imaging techniques, computed tomography (CT) and conventional magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) are insensitive to dynamic and regionally varying neural parenchymal responses to tissue ischemia. MR spectroscopy is an interesting new application of MRI for the study of patients with transient ischemic attack (TIA). In an UCLA study, among TIA patients with early DWI abnormalities who had follow-up imaging, approximately one-half exhibited late CT or MRI evidence of established infarction. Both UCLA and Duke Series found a strong statistical correlation between duration of TIA symptoms and presence of a lesion on DWI. MR imaging studies have demonstrated the untenability of any definition of TIA based solely on clinical manifestations and an arbitrarily assigned time window, rather than tissue changes and physiologic processes. MRI has fundamentally altered our understanding of the pathophysiology of transient ischemic attack.
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