S. Warach et al., CLINICAL OUTCOME IN ISCHEMIC STROKE PREDICTED BY EARLY DIFFUSION-WEIGHTED AND PERFUSION MAGNETIC-RESONANCE-IMAGING - A PRELIMINARY-ANALYSIS, Journal of cerebral blood flow and metabolism, 16(1), 1996, pp. 53-59
Perfusion and diffusion-weighted magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) can
demonstrate, respectively, cerebral ischemia and ischemic brain injury
in the first several hours after onset of symptoms, when proton densi
ty and T2-weighted MRI may appear normal. It is hypothesized that thes
e techniques could distinguish regions destined for infarction from th
ose that will not progress to infarction. We provide preliminary evide
nce from an analysis of 19 patients with severely disabling clinical d
eficits attributable to ischemia in at least an entire division of the
middle cerebral artery, that initial perfusion and diffusion MRI were
more accurate than conventional MRI in predicting no, partial or comp
lete improvement - 17 of 19 cases (p < 0.0001) versus 10 of 19 cases,
respectively. In the subset of patients studied within 6 h of onset, d
iffusion/perfusion MRI was an even better predictor than conventional
MRI-11 of 12 versus four of 12, respectively. In this small sample of
patients with severe clinical deficits, perfusion and diffusion MRI we
re highly accurate in distinguishing those who would improve from thos
e who would not. These results need to be confirmed in a larger prospe
ctive study, which may support a future role in the initial screening,
selection, and evaluation of patients with stroke for acute pharmacol
ogic interventions.