Increased corticospinal tract fractional anisotropy can discriminate stroke onset within the first 4.5 hours

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Abstract

Background and Purpose-The role of diffusion tensor imaging in determining stroke age remains unclear. We tested the ability of diffusion tensor imaging metrics to discriminate ischemic stroke <4.5 hours of onset. Methods-We enrolled 60 consecutive patients for multimodal 1.5 T MRI within 12 hours of middle cerebral artery ischemic stroke onset. We measured fractional anisotropy (FA), mean diffusivity (MD), apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC), and T2-weighted signal intensity in affected ipsilateral and unaffected contralateral deep gray matter, cortical gray matter, deep white matter in the corticospinal tract (CST), and subcortical white matter and calculated ipsilateral-to-contralateral ratios (r). Hyperintensity in infarcted tissue was considered fluid-attenuated inversion recovery-positive. Results-We analyzed the 48 patients (17 women; mean age, 68±14 years) with known onset. In 25 (52.1%) patients, onset was ≤4.5 hours (mean, 182.3±65.6 minutes). Variables differing significantly between infarcts <4.5 hours and >4.5 hours were rFA CST (P=0.001), rMD cortical gray matter (P=0.036), rADC cortical gray matter (P=0.009), rT2 CST (P=0.006), and fluid-attenuated inversion recovery (P<0.001). rFA at CST was the most reliable to discriminate infarcts <4.5 hours (Goodman-Kruskal=0.76). The sensitivity, specificity, and positive and negative predictive values for infarct <4.5 hours of onset by rFA at CST >0.970 were 93.8%, 84.6%, 88.2%, and 91.7%, respectively. Conclusions-These preliminary results suggest rFA at CST may be a surrogate marker of acute stroke age. © 2013 American Heart Association, Inc.

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Puig, J., Blasco, G., Daunis-I-Estadella, J., Thomalla, G., Castellanos, M., Soria, G., … Pedraza, S. (2013). Increased corticospinal tract fractional anisotropy can discriminate stroke onset within the first 4.5 hours. Stroke, 44(4), 1162–1165. https://doi.org/10.1161/STROKEAHA.111.678110

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