| Literature DB >> 1804517 |
J Kucharczyk1, J Mintorovitch, H Asgari, M Tsuura, M Moseley.
Abstract
We compared the anatomic extent and severity of ischemic brain injury shown on diffusion-weighted magnetic resonance (MR) images, with cerebral tissue perfusion deficits demonstrated by a nonionic intravascular T2*-shortening magnetic susceptibility contrast agent used in conjunction with standard T2-weighted spin-echo and gradient-echo echo-planar images. Diffusion-weighted images displayed increased signal intensity in the vascular territory of the middle cerebral artery 25-40 min after permanent occlusion, whereas T2-weighted images without contrast were negative or equivocal for at least 2-3 h after stroke was induced. Contrast-enhanced T2-weighted and echo-planar images revealed perfusion deficits that were spatially closely related to the anatomic regions of ischemic tissue injury. These data indicate that diffusion-weighted MR images are very sensitive to early onset pathophysiologic changes induced by acute cerebral ischemia. Combined sequential diffusion-perfusion imaging enables noninvasive in vivo examination of the relationship between hypoperfusion and evolving ischemic brain injury.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 1991 PMID: 1804517 DOI: 10.1139/y91-255
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Can J Physiol Pharmacol ISSN: 0008-4212 Impact factor: 2.273