1. Do FLAIR vascular hyperintensities beyond the DWI lesion represent the ischemic penumbra?
- Author
-
Legrand L, Tisserand M, Turc G, Naggara O, Edjlali M, Mellerio C, Mas JL, Méder JF, Baron JC, and Oppenheim C
- Subjects
- Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Female, Humans, Image Processing, Computer-Assisted, Male, Middle Aged, Reproducibility of Results, Sensitivity and Specificity, Stroke pathology, Diffusion Magnetic Resonance Imaging methods, Infarction, Middle Cerebral Artery pathology, Stroke blood
- Abstract
Background and Purpose: In acute stroke with proximal artery occlusion, FLAIR vascular hyperintensities observed beyond the boundaries of the cortical lesion on DWI (newly defined "FLAIR vascular hyperintensity-DWI mismatch") may be a marker of tissue at risk of infarction. Our aim was to compare the occurrence of FLAIR vascular hyperintensity-DWI mismatch relative to that of perfusion-weighted imaging-DWI mismatch in patients with proximal MCA occlusion before IV thrombolysis., Materials and Methods: In 141 consecutive patients with proximal MCA occlusion, 2 independent observers analyzed FLAIR images for the presence of FLAIR vascular hyperintensity-DWI mismatch before IV thrombolysis. PWI-DWI mismatch was defined as Volumehypoperfusion > 1.8 × VolumeDWI, with Volumehypoperfusion > 6 seconds on time to maximum value of the residue function maps in the 94 patients with available PWI. The presence of FLAIR vascular hyperintensity-DWI mismatch, PWI-DWI mismatch, and infarct growth on 24-hour follow-up DWI was compared., Results: A FLAIR vascular hyperintensity-DWI mismatch was present in 102/141 (72%) patients, with an excellent interobserver reliability (κ = 0.91), and a PWI-DWI mismatch, in 61 of the 94 (65%) patients with available PWI. FLAIR vascular hyperintensity-DWI mismatch predicted PWI-DWI mismatch with a sensitivity of 92% (95% CI, 85%-99%) and a specificity of 64% (95% CI, 47%-80%). Patients with FLAIR vascular hyperintensity-DWI mismatch had smaller initial DWI lesion and larger infarct growth (P < .001) than patients without FLAIR vascular hyperintensity-DWI mismatch, even though their final infarcts remained smaller (P < .001)., Conclusions: Albeit being moderately specific, probably due to inclusion of oligemic tissue, the FLAIR vascular hyperintensity-DWI mismatch identifies large PWI-DWI mismatch with high sensitivity., (© 2015 by American Journal of Neuroradiology.) more...
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF