4.7 Article

Fluid-attenuated inversion recovery and diffusion- and perfusion-weighted MRI abnormalities in 117 consecutive patients with stroke symptoms

Journal

STROKE
Volume 32, Issue 12, Pages 2774-2781

Publisher

LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS
DOI: 10.1161/hs1201.099634

Keywords

cerebrovascular disorders; magnetic resonance imaging, diffusion-weighted; magnetic resonance imaging, perfusion-weighted

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Background and Purpose-Diffusion-weighted MRI (DWI) is highly sensitive to early cerebral ischemia, but its dependence on lesion location, acuity, and etiology remains unknown. Furthermore, although a marked perfusion-weighted MRI (PWI)-DWI mismatch may exist in a subset of acute strokes. the frequency and distribution of these mismatches have never been methodically characterized in an unselected population. To address these 2 issues, we evaluated echo-planar imaging in 117 consecutive patients with and symptoms of acute stroke. Methods-Clinical dia-noses were determined by chart review. Fluid-attenuated inversion recovery (FLAIR), DWI, and PWI sequences were scored for lesion acuity, neuroanatomy, and vascular territory. Lesion and PWI-DWI mismatch volumes were determined by image analysis. Results-DWI was more sensitive than was FLAIR for the detection of stroke for all subtypes in all anatomic distributions and at all tested time intervals. Although DWI exhibited its greatest benefit over FLAIR during the first 6 hours, it was still superior to FLAIR even after 24 hours. PWI abnormalities were detected in 49% of patients with DWI abnormalities. In the majority of these cases, the PWI-DWI mismatch as substantially larger than the DWI lesion itself. Both the largest DWI lesion volumes and the largest mismatch volumes occurred in patients with carotid disease. Conclusions-DWI neat doubles the likelihood of detecting acute ischemic stroke lesions compared with FLAIR for all etiologies and in all anatomic locations. In the hyperacute period (0 to 6 hours), DWI more than triples the likelihood of acute-stroke detection over FLAIR. PWI reveals a measurable mismatch compared with DWI nearly 50% of the time; and in more than half of these patients, the ratio of the volume of the DWI lesion to the DWI lesion is several times larger than the core ischemic lesion itself. In the final analysis, approximately one fourth of all stroke patients present with a large volume of potentially salvageable tissue at risk for infarction.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available