Use of Exponential Diffusion Imaging to Determine the Age of Ischemic Infarcts
- 1 April 2001
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in Journal of Neuroimaging
- Vol. 11 (2) , 141-147
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1552-6569.2001.tb00024.x
Abstract
Objective. Diffusion‐weighted magnetic resonance imaging (DWI) detects acute ischemic infarcts with high lesion conspicuity. Determination of infarct age is difficult on DWI alone because infarct signal intensity (SIinfarct) on DWI is influenced by T2properties (“T2shine‐through”). Maps of the apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC) reflect pure diffusion characteristics without T2effects but have low lesion conspicuity. Thus, in clinical practice, combined use of DWI and ADC maps is required. Exponential DWI (eDWI) is an innovative means of MRI‐diffusion data analysis that merges the advantages of DWI and ADC maps. The authors hypothesized that SIinfarcton eDWI would correlate with infarct age. The authors studied 114 consecutive patients who had 120 ischemic strokes with clearly determined onset times and who underwent echo‐planar DWI. The eDWI were generated by dividing the signal intensity on DWI by that on the corresponding T2image on a pixel‐by‐pixel basis. SIinfarcton eDWI was measured in the lesion core and expressed as a percentage of contralateral control tissue. On eDWI, relative SIinfarctchanged significantly with infarct age (P < .0001). When patients were sorted in infarct‐age groups, no significant differences were found within the first 120 hours. However, for patients studied within 5 days, the mean relative SIinfarctwas significantly higher compared with patients studied ≥8 days after stroke (P < .05). For all infarcts up to 5 days old, the eDWI signal intensity was higher than control tissue (hyperintense appearance). All infarcts >10 days old had an eDWI signal intensity lower than control tissue (hypointense appearance). The authors concluded that the use of eDWI, as a single set of images, reliably differentiates acute infarcts (≤5 days old) from infarcts >10 days old. This feature would be expected to be helpful when the distinction between acute and nonacute infarction cannot be determined on clinical grounds.Keywords
This publication has 25 references indexed in Scilit:
- Use of MR exponential diffusion-weighted images to eradicate T2 "shine-through" effect.American Journal of Roentgenology, 1999
- Different Apparent Diffusion CoefficientStroke, 1998
- Hyperacute stroke: evaluation with combined multisection diffusion-weighted and hemodynamically weighted echo-planar MR imaging.Radiology, 1996
- A Model to Predict the Histopathology of Human Stroke Using Diffusion and T2-Weighted Magnetic Resonance ImagingStroke, 1995
- Magnetic resonance imaging assessment of evolving focal cerebral ischemia. Comparison with histopathology in rats.Stroke, 1994
- Diffusion nuclear magnetic resonance imaging in experimental stroke. Correlation with cerebral metabolites.Stroke, 1994
- Classification of subtype of acute ischemic stroke. Definitions for use in a multicenter clinical trial. TOAST. Trial of Org 10172 in Acute Stroke Treatment.Stroke, 1993
- Diffusion-weighted imaging studies of cerebral ischemia in gerbils. Potential relevance to energy failure.Stroke, 1992
- Mechanism of detection of acute cerebral ischemia in rats by diffusion-weighted magnetic resonance microscopy.Stroke, 1992
- MR imaging of intravoxel incoherent motions: application to diffusion and perfusion in neurologic disorders.Radiology, 1986