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Comparative Study
. 1991 Jul-Aug;12(4):611-20.

Diagnosis of acute cerebral infarction: comparison of CT and MR imaging

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Comparative Study

Diagnosis of acute cerebral infarction: comparison of CT and MR imaging

R N Bryan et al. AJNR Am J Neuroradiol. 1991 Jul-Aug.

Abstract

The appearance of acute cerebral infarction was evaluated on MR images and CT scans obtained in 31 patients within 24 hr of the ictus; follow-up examinations were performed 7-10 days later in 20 of these patients and were correlated with the initial studies. Acute infarcts were visible more frequently on MR images than on CT scans (82% vs 58%). Proton density- and T2-weighted scans usually demonstrated regions of hyperintensity corresponding to acute infarcts, but proton density-weighted scans often showed better definition of the lesion in terms of regional anatomy. Follow-up MR images and CT scans identified approximately 88% of subacute strokes, 54% of which were better defined and/or larger than on the initial examination. In 20% of lesions, "hemorrhagic" characteristics were seen on at least one examination. CT and MR imaging were comparable in delineating acute hemorrhage, but MR detected more cases with evidence of hemorrhage on follow-up examinations. MR appears to be more sensitive than CT in the imaging of acute stroke.

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Comment in

  • Acute cerebral ischemia: CT and MR findings.
    Bozzao L, Fantozzi LM, Bastianello S. Bozzao L, et al. AJNR Am J Neuroradiol. 1992 Mar-Apr;13(2):829-31. AJNR Am J Neuroradiol. 1992. PMID: 1566733 Free PMC article. No abstract available.

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