Keir S L, Wardlaw J M
Department of Clinical Neurosciences, Western General Hospital NHS Trust, Edinburgh, UK.
Stroke. 2000 Nov;31(11):2723-31. doi: 10.1161/01.str.31.11.2723.
Recent advances in neuroimaging have raised hopes of early and accurate identification of ischemic brain and the discrimination of dead from salvageable tissue. We sought to determine whether the data published so far are enough to establish the roles of these techniques in everyday clinical practice.
A systematic review of studies of MR diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI), perfusion imaging (PI), or a combination of the two, in human stroke, excluding abstracts and case reports. One reviewer extracted information on the size of each study, its main purpose, methodological details, and results.
We identified 47 studies of DWI, 18 studies of MR PI alone or in combination with another advanced imaging modality, and 19 studies of DWI and PI together. Although high proportions of the studies were prospective and gave good details of the imaging sequences used, the majority gave very limited details on patient selection and clinical characteristics or blinded imaging assessment. Pathophysiological changes were inferred from DWI/PI patterns that were not supported by other data.
Despite considerable enthusiasm for and promise of these techniques, there is not sufficient information available in these studies to enable us to draw firm conclusions about the sensitivity and specificity of these techniques for identification of either ischemic lesions not visible by other means or salvageable tissue. Future studies should include larger numbers of carefully described patients, assess the contribution of DWI over and above other imaging, obtain follow-up at an appropriate time interval to determine accurate clinical and neuroradiological outcomes, and assess DWI/PI abnormality with reperfusion in randomized treatment trials. Investigators should also be encouraged to combine their individual patient data in meta-analyses to obtain a more robust assessment of the value of DWI and PI from larger sample sizes.
神经影像学的最新进展燃起了人们对早期准确识别缺血性脑以及区分坏死组织与可挽救组织的希望。我们试图确定目前已发表的数据是否足以确立这些技术在日常临床实践中的作用。
对人类中风中磁共振扩散加权成像(DWI)、灌注成像(PI)或两者结合的研究进行系统综述,排除摘要和病例报告。一名评审员提取了每项研究的规模、主要目的、方法细节和结果等信息。
我们确定了47项关于DWI的研究、18项单独的磁共振PI研究或与另一种先进成像方式结合的研究,以及19项DWI和PI联合研究。尽管大部分研究是前瞻性的,且对所使用的成像序列给出了详细信息,但大多数研究在患者选择、临床特征或盲法成像评估方面提供的细节非常有限。病理生理变化是从DWI/PI模式推断出来的,而这些模式并未得到其他数据的支持。
尽管这些技术备受关注且前景广阔,但这些研究中没有足够的信息使我们能够就这些技术识别其他方法不可见的缺血性病变或可挽救组织的敏感性和特异性得出确凿结论。未来的研究应纳入更多详细描述的患者,评估DWI相对于其他成像的贡献,在适当的时间间隔进行随访以确定准确的临床和神经放射学结果,并在随机治疗试验中评估DWI/PI异常与再灌注的关系。还应鼓励研究人员在荟萃分析中合并他们的个体患者数据,以便从更大的样本量中更有力地评估DWI和PI的价值。