Showing posts with label acute stroke. Show all posts

Diagnostic Criteria of Infarction in MRI of the Brain in Acute Stroke

Acute: Subtle low signal (hypointense) on T1, often difficult to see at this stage, and high signal (hyperintense) on spin density and/or T2-weighted and proton density-weighted images starting 8 h after onset; should follow vascular distribution. Mass effect maximal at 24 h, sometimes starting 2 h after onset, even in the absence of parenchymal signal changes. No parenchymal enhancement with paramagnetic contrast agent. Territorial intravascular paramagnetic contrast enhancement of "slow-flow" arteries in hyperacute infarcts; at 48 h, parenchymal and meningeal enhancement can be expected.

    Subacute (1 wk or older): Low signal on T1, high signal on T2-weighted images. Follows vascular distribution. Revascularization and blood-brain barrier breakdown may cause parenchymal enhancement with contrast agents.

    Old (several weeks to years): Low signal on T1, high signal on T2. Mass effect disappears after 1 mo. Loss of tissue with large infarcts. Parenchymal enhancement fades after several months.

Source: Strokecenter

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Diagnostic Criteria of Infarction in CT Imaging of the Brain in Acute Stroke

Infarction in CT Imaging of the Brain in Acute Stroke

Infarction: focal hypodense area, in cortical, subcortical, or deep gray or white matter, following vascular territory, or watershed distribution. Early subtle findings include obscuration of gray/white matter contrast and effacement of sulci, or "insular ribbon."

Hemorrhage: hyperdense image in white or deep gray matter, with or without involvement of cortical surface (40 to 90 HU). Petechial refers to scattered hyperdense points, coalescing to form irregularly hyperdense areas with hypodense interruptions. Hematoma refers to a solid, homogeneously hyperdense image.

    Hyperdense image in major intracranial artery: suggestive of vascular embolic material.

    Calcification: hyperdense image within or attached to vessel wall (>120 HU).

    Incidental: silent infarct, subdural collection, tumor, giant aneurysm, arteriovenous malformation.

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