ABSTRACT
To study the prevalence of silent cerebral infarction in Type II diabetes mellitus. The study was a prospective study on 80 patients recruited from neurology, endocrine outpatient clinics. Patients were type II diabetics as described by the American Diabetes Association, 2011 criteria. All patients underwent full metabolic profiles to diagnose diabetes mellitus and MRI brain scans to detect cerebral infarction. Silent cerebral infarctions were detected in 60% of patients [48/80 patients] predominately along periventricular white matter area and subcortical areas [Basal ganglia, Thalamus]. Asymptomatic Type II diabetes mellitus patients could have vascular cerebral changes without neurological symptoms. MRI brain scans could be recommended as routine diagnosis [if possible] for early cerebral infarct detection in type II diabetic patients