Teasdale G M, Hadley D M, Lawrence A, Bone I, Burton H, Grant R, Condon B, Macpherson P, Rowan J
Institute of Neurological Sciences, Southern General Hospital, Glasgow.
BMJ. 1989 Aug 5;299(6695):349-55. doi: 10.1136/bmj.299.6695.349.
To compare computed tomography and magnetic resonance imaging in investigating patients suspected of having a lesion in the posterior cranial fossa.
Randomised allocation of newly referred patients to undergo either computed tomography or magnetic resonance imaging; the alternative investigation was performed subsequently only in response to a request from the referring doctor.
A regional neuroscience centre serving 2.7 million.
1020 Patients recruited between April 1986 and December 1987, all suspected by neurologists, neurosurgeons, or other specialists of having a lesion in the posterior fossa and referred for neuroradiology. The groups allocated to undergo computed tomography or magnetic resonance imaging were well matched in distributions of age, sex, specialty of referring doctor, investigation as an inpatient or an outpatient, suspected site of lesion, and presumed disease process; the referring doctor's confidence in the initial clinical diagnosis was also similar.
After the patients had been imaged by either computed tomography or magnetic resonance (using a resistive magnet of 0.15 T) doctors were given the radiologist's report and a form asking if they considered that imaging with the alternative technique was necessary and, if so, why; it also asked for their current diagnoses and their confidence in them.
Number of requests for the alternative method of investigation. Assessment of characteristics of patients for whom further imaging was requested and lesions that were suspected initially and how the results of the second imaging affected clinicians' and radiologists' opinions.
Ninety three of the 501 patients who initially underwent computed tomography were referred subsequently for magnetic resonance imaging whereas only 28 of the 493 patients who initially underwent magnetic resonance imaging were referred subsequently for computed tomography. Over the study the number of patients referred for magnetic resonance imaging after computed tomography increased but requests for computed tomography after magnetic resonance imaging decreased. The reason that clinicians gave most commonly for requesting further imaging by magnetic resonance was that the results of the initial computed tomography failed to exclude their suspected diagnosis (64 patients). This was less common in patients investigated initially by magnetic resonance imaging (eight patients). Management of 28 patients (6%) imaged initially with computed tomography and 12 patients (2%) imaged initially with magnetic resonance was changed on the basis of the results of the alternative imaging.
Magnetic resonance imaging provided doctors with the information required to manage patients suspected of having a lesion in the posterior fossa more commonly than computed tomography, but computed tomography alone was satisfactory in 80% of cases...
比较计算机断层扫描(CT)和磁共振成像(MRI)在检查疑似后颅窝病变患者中的应用。
将新转诊患者随机分配接受CT或MRI检查;仅在转诊医生提出要求时才进行另一种检查。
一个服务270万人口的地区神经科学中心。
1986年4月至1987年12月招募的1020例患者,均被神经科医生、神经外科医生或其他专科医生怀疑后颅窝有病变并转诊至神经放射科。分配接受CT或MRI检查的两组患者在年龄、性别、转诊医生专业、住院或门诊检查、疑似病变部位及推测的疾病过程分布上匹配良好;转诊医生对初始临床诊断的信心也相似。
患者接受CT或MRI(使用0.15T的电阻磁体)成像后,医生会收到放射科医生的报告以及一份表格,询问他们是否认为有必要用另一种技术成像,如果是,原因是什么;表格还询问了他们当前的诊断以及对此的信心。
对另一种检查方法的请求数量。对请求进一步成像的患者特征、最初怀疑的病变以及第二次成像结果如何影响临床医生和放射科医生的意见进行评估。
最初接受CT检查的501例患者中有93例随后被转诊进行MRI检查,而最初接受MRI检查的493例患者中只有28例随后被转诊进行CT检查。在研究过程中,CT检查后转诊进行MRI检查的患者数量增加,但MRI检查后请求CT检查的数量减少。临床医生最常给出的要求进一步进行MRI成像的原因是初始CT检查结果未能排除他们怀疑的诊断(64例患者)。这在最初接受MRI检查的患者中不太常见(8例患者)。根据另一种成像结果,最初接受CT检查的28例患者(6%)和最初接受MRI检查的12例患者(2%)的治疗方案发生了改变。
与CT相比,MRI更常为医生提供管理疑似后颅窝病变患者所需的信息,但仅CT在80%的病例中是令人满意的……