Diffusion-Weighted Imaging as a Problem-Solving Tool in the Evaluation of Patients with Acute Strokelike Syndromes
- 1 October 2000
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Topics in Magnetic Resonance Imaging
- Vol. 11 (5), 300-309
- https://doi.org/10.1097/00002142-200010000-00006
Abstract
This article addresses syndromes that clinically and/or radiologically resemble acute stroke. These syndromes generally fall into four categories. (1) Patients with acute neurological deficits with nonischemic lesions and no acute abnormality on diffusion-weighted images. These patients may have peripheral vertigo, migraines, seizures, dementia, functional disorders, amyloid angiopathy, or metabolic disorders. When these patients present, we can confidently predict that they are not undergoing infarction. (2) Patients with ischemic lesions with reversible clinical deficits. Nearly 50% of patients with transient ischemic attacks have lesions with restricted diffusion. Patients with transient global amnesia may have punctate lesions with restricted diffusion in the medial hippocampus, parahippocampal gyms, and corpus callosum. (3) Vasogenic edema syndromes that may mimic acute infarction clinically and on conventional imaging. These include eclampsia/hypertensive encephalopathy, other posterior leukoencephalopathies, human immunodeficiency virus encephalopathy, hyperperfusion syndrome following carotid endarterectomy, venous sinus thrombosis, acute demyelination, and neoplasm. These syndromes demonstrate elevated diffusion rather than the restricted diffusion associated with acute ischemic stroke. (4) Entities in which restricted diffusion may resemble acute infarction. These include pyogenic infections, herpes virus encephalitis, Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease, diffuse axonal injury, tumors with dense cell packing, and rare acute demyelinative lesions.Keywords
This publication has 30 references indexed in Scilit:
- Diffusion MRI in Patients With Transient Ischemic AttacksStroke, 1999
- Normal diffusion-weighted MRI during stroke-like deficitsNeurology, 1999
- Diffusion-weighted MR Imaging: Diagnostic Accuracy in Patients Imaged within 6 Hours of Stroke Symptom OnsetRadiology, 1999
- Diffusion-Weighted Magnetic Resonance Imaging in Acute StrokeStroke, 1998
- Diffusion-weighted MRI characterizes the ischemic lesion in transient global amnesiaNeurology, 1998
- Diffusion‐weighted MRI in transient global amnesia: Elevated signal intensity in the left mesial temporal lobe in 7 of 10 patientsAnnals of Neurology, 1998
- Acute and chronic stroke: navigated spin-echo diffusion-weighted MR imaging.Radiology, 1996
- Diffusion-Weighted Magnetic Resonance Imaging of Acute Focal Cerebral Ischemia: Comparison of Signal Intensity with Changes in Brain Water and Na+,K+-ATPase ActivityJournal of Cerebral Blood Flow & Metabolism, 1994
- Echo-planar perfusion-sensitive MR imaging of acute cerebral ischemia.Radiology, 1993
- Cytotoxic brain edema: assessment with diffusion-weighted MR imaging.Radiology, 1992