Mohr J P, Biller J, Hilal S K, Yuh W T, Tatemichi T K, Hedges S, Tali E, Nguyen H, Mun I, Adams H P
Neurological Institute, New York, NY 10032, USA.
Stroke. 1995 May;26(5):807-12. doi: 10.1161/01.str.26.5.807.
This study was an attempt to determine whether CT and MRI are comparable or if one is superior to the other in the early detection of ischemic stroke or hematoma.
Patients with acute stroke were sought within 3 hours of onset for clinical examination and prospective evaluation by concurrently performed CT and MRI. Repeated clinical and imaging studies were undertaken when possible immediately after imaging and at 24 hours, 3 to 5 days, and 3 months. The study neurologists were blinded to the results of imaging, as were the study radiologists to the clinical findings. The study radiologists read the scans in sequence, mapping each imaging on standard templates before viewing a later scan. No retrospective revisions of imaging mapping of earlier images were undertaken.
Sixty-eight patients were recruited within 4 hours and an additional 12 patients within 24 hours. Seventy-five strokes were due to infarction and five to hemorrhage. The median time to first scan was 132 minutes. Although some of the infarctions in 75 patients were detected within 1 hour, the fraction of positive first scans approached an asymptote at 2 to 3 hours. Overall, with the use of conventional non-contrast-enhanced CT and T1- and T2-weighted MRI, neither was superior in the very early detection of either hematoma or infarction. There was a marginally significant correlation between early positive brain imaging and the severity of the stroke. Some patients had initially positive CT and/or MRI scans, but their neurological examination had returned to normal by 24 hours. Overall, CT was better than baseline MRI at predicting 24-hour outcome. After 24 hours, both CT and MR more conspicuously defined the lesion limits than they did at baseline.
With the technology available through 1991, neither CT nor MRI proved superior in the detection of the earliest signs of stroke.
本研究旨在确定CT和MRI在早期检测缺血性卒中或血肿方面是否具有可比性,或者其中一种是否优于另一种。
在发病3小时内寻找急性卒中患者进行临床检查,并同时进行CT和MRI的前瞻性评估。在成像后尽可能立即以及在24小时、3至5天和3个月时进行重复的临床和影像学研究。研究神经科医生对影像学结果不知情,研究放射科医生对临床发现也不知情。研究放射科医生按顺序阅读扫描结果,在查看后续扫描之前将每个影像映射到标准模板上。未对早期影像的成像映射进行回顾性修订。
在4小时内招募了68名患者,在24小时内又招募了12名患者。75例卒中为梗死,5例为出血。首次扫描的中位时间为132分钟。虽然75例患者中的一些梗死在1小时内被检测到,但首次扫描阳性率在2至3小时时接近渐近线。总体而言,使用传统的非增强CT以及T1加权和T2加权MRI,在血肿或梗死的极早期检测中两者均不具有优势。早期脑成像阳性与卒中严重程度之间存在微弱的显著相关性。一些患者最初CT和/或MRI扫描呈阳性,但他们的神经学检查在24小时时已恢复正常。总体而言,在预测24小时结局方面CT优于基线MRI。24小时后,CT和MR对病变边界的界定都比基线时更明显。
就1991年可用的技术而言,CT和MRI在检测卒中最早迹象方面均未显示出优势。