Stroke Mimics in the Acute Setting: Role of Multimodal CT Protocol
- PMID: 34969667
- PMCID: PMC8985681
- DOI: 10.3174/ajnr.A7379
Stroke Mimics in the Acute Setting: Role of Multimodal CT Protocol
Abstract
Background and purpose: Ischemic stroke can be mimicked by nonischemic conditions. Due to emphasis on the rapid treatment of acute ischemic stroke, it is crucial to identify these conditions to avoid unnecessary therapies and potential complications. We investigated the performance of the multimodal CT protocol (unenhanced brain CT, CTA, and CTP) to discriminate stroke mimics from acute ischemic stroke.
Materials and methods: We retrospectively selected multimodal CT studies performed for clinical suspicion of acute ischemic stroke in our center in a 24-month period, including patients with at least 1 follow-up imaging study (brain CT or MR imaging). Hemorrhagic strokes were excluded. We measured the performance of multimodal CT, comparing the original diagnostic results with the final clinical diagnosis at discharge.
Results: Among 401 patients, a stroke mimic condition was diagnosed in 89 (22%), including seizures (34.8%), migraine with aura attack (12.4%), conversion disorder (12.4%), infection (7.9%), brain tumor (7.9%), acute metabolic condition (6.7%), peripheral vertigo (5.6%), syncope (5.6%), transient global amnesia (3.4%), subdural hematoma (1.1%), cervical epidural hematoma (1.1%), and dural AVF (1.1%). Multimodal CT sensitivity, specificity, and accuracy were 24.7%, 99.7%, and 83%. Multimodal CT revealed peri-ictal changes in 13/31 seizures and diagnosed 7/7 brain tumors, 1/1 dural AVF, and 1/1 subdural hematoma. CT perfusion played a pivotal diagnostic role.
Conclusions: Multimodal CT demonstrated low sensitivity but high specificity in the diagnosis of stroke mimics in the acute setting. The high specificity of multimodal CT allows ruling out stroke and thereby avoiding unnecessary revascularization treatment in patients with diagnosis of a stroke mimic.
© 2022 by American Journal of Neuroradiology.
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Comment in
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The Nosologic Term "Conversive" Disorder Should Be Abandoned.AJNR Am J Neuroradiol. 2022 Aug;43(8):E17. doi: 10.3174/ajnr.A7504. Epub 2022 Jul 21. AJNR Am J Neuroradiol. 2022. PMID: 35863778 Free PMC article. No abstract available.
References
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