Abstract
Tissue changes in ischaemic stroke are detectable by diffusion-weighted MRI (DWI) within minutes of the onset of symptoms. However, in daily routine CT is still the preferred imaging modality for patients with acute stroke. Our purpose of this study was to determine how early and reliably ischaemic brain infarcts can be identified by CT and DWI. Three neuroradiologists, blinded to clinical signs but aware that they were dealing with stroke, analysed the CT and DWI of 31 patients with an acute ischaemic stroke. We calculated k-values to analyse inter-rater variability. The ratings were compared with follow-up studies showing the extent of the infarct. The combined assessment of all observers gave positive findings in 77.4 % of all CT examinations, with k = 0.58. Areas of high signal were seen on all DWI studies by all observers (k = 1). Estimation of the extent of the infarct based on DWI yielded k = 0.70 and that based on CT k = 0.39. DWI was much more reliable than CT in the detection of early ischaemic lesions and we believe that it should be used in acute ischaemic stroke before aggressive therapeutic intervention.
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Received: 11 August 2000 Accepted: 29 November 2000
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Fiebach, J., Jansen, O., Schellinger, P. et al. Comparison of CT with diffusion-weighted MRI in patients with hyperacute stroke. Neuroradiology 43, 628–632 (2001). https://doi.org/10.1007/s002340100542
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s002340100542