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    AJNR Am J Neuroradiol. 1991 Jul-Aug;12(4):611-20.

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

    Source

    Russell H. Morgan Department of Radiology and Radiological Science, Johns Hopkins Hospital, Baltimore, MD 21205.

    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.

    PMID:
    1688347
    [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

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