急性脑卒中弥漫性病变的磁共振成像缓解

F. Fellner, M. Vosko, C. Fellner, D. Flöry
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摘要

目的:脑卒中磁共振(MR)中的失配概念是基于弥散加权成像(DWI)表明梗死核心代表不可逆损伤组织的假设。然而,这一理论尚未在大型患者队列中得到证实。另一方面,一些出版物报道了DWI病变可能缓解的病例。因此,本研究的目的是分析随访MR成像时扩散受限的时间演变,并分析DWI病变缓解病例的临床和影像学特征。方法和材料:对176例连续12个月内MR检查时弥散受限的脑卒中患者进行评估。通过初始MR和24小时后随访判断扩散限制延长。病变扩展的变化由两位经验丰富的神经放射学家一致评估。结果:104/176例(59.1%)患者随访MR时病变扩展受限与初扫相同,66/176例(37.5%)病变扩大。病变大小减小(病变部分缓解)6/176 (3.4%);所有病变均未完全缓解。所有6例DWI病变部分缓解的患者均进行了早期静脉溶栓治疗,并表现出良好的临床结果。在6例DWI病变缓解的病例中,有1例DWI病变在第一次随访检查后显示尺寸再次增加,见于随访后期。结论:我们的研究结果证明了现有的假设,即扩散限制代表梗死核心,其体积可能保持不变或随着时间的推移而增加,表明准确率接近97%。DWI病变的部分消退是极其罕见的,通常与早期静脉溶栓和良好的临床结果有关。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Remission of diffusion lesions in acute stroke magnetic resonance imaging
Purpose: The mismatch concept in stroke magnetic resonance (MR) is based on the assumption that diffusion weighted imaging (DWI) indicates infarct core representing irreversibly damaged tissue. However, this thesis has not been proven yet in a large patient cohort. On the other hand, some publications report cases with possible remission of lesions at DWI. Thus, the aim of this study was to analyze temporal evolution of restricted diffusion at follow up MR imaging and analyze clinical and imaging features of cases with remission of DWI lesions. Methods and Materials: 176 consecutive stroke patients (within 12 months) demonstrating restricted diffusion at initial MR examination were evaluated. Extension of diffusion restriction was judged both on initial MR as well as on follow-up after 24 hours. Changes in lesion extension were assessed by two experienced neuroradiologists in consensus. Results: Extension of lesions with restricted diffusion at follow up MR was identical to the initial scan in 104/176 patients (59.1%) and increased in 66/176 (37.5%). The lesion size was decreased (meaning partial remission of the lesion) in 6/176 (3.4%); none of the lesions showed complete remission. All six patients with partial remission of DWI lesions underwent early i.v. thrombolysis and demonstrated excellent clinical outcome. In one case out of the six cases with remission of DWI lesions, the DWI lesions demonstrated a re-increase in size after the first follow up examination, seen at late follow-up. Conclusion: Our findings prove the existing assumption that diffusion restriction represents the infarct core, which may remain unchanged or increase in volume over time, indicating an accuracy of almost 97%. Partial resolution of DWI lesions is extremely rare and usually associated with early i.v. thrombolysis and favourable clinical outcome.
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