Cerebral spinal fluid contamination of the measurement of the apparent diffusion coefficient of water in acute stroke
Open Access
- 23 August 2002
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in Magnetic Resonance in Medicine
- Vol. 48 (3), 478-486
- https://doi.org/10.1002/mrm.10238
Abstract
The measurement of the apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC) of water in brains of stroke patients is used in models developed to help distinguish reversible from irreversible ischemic injury. The ADC by conventional methods may be overestimated by the presence of cerebral spinal fluid (CSF) in sulci and perivascular spaces. In this study the hypothesis that DWI with CSF suppression (FLAIR-DWI) would result in different ADC values than those obtained with the conventional DWI technique was investigated. Thirty-one patients with stroke onset of less than 6 hr and an acute lesion on conventional DWI were studied. Both conventional isotropic DWI and FLAIR-DWI were performed using a single-shot echo-planar technique. In all 31 patients, CSF-suppressed ADC was lower than conventional ADC. The mean (SD) of the 31 patients' lesion ADC was 0.64 (0.08) × 10−3 mm2 s−1 with FLAIR-DWI and 0.72 (0.09) × 10−3 mm2 s−1 with conventional DWI (P < 0.001). The overestimation of ADC in conventional DWI corresponded to the percentage of the voxel that contained CSF. Suppression of CSF leads to lesion ADC values that are more homogeneous and more than 15% lower than those obtained with conventional DWI techniques. This suggests that FLAIR-DWI ADC measurements are more accurate than conventional ADC maps. Magn Reson Med 48:478–486, 2002. Published 2002 Wiley-Liss, Inc.Keywords
This publication has 34 references indexed in Scilit:
- Multiparametric MRI Tissue Characterization in Clinical Stroke With Correlation to Clinical OutcomeStroke, 2001
- Diffusion MR Imaging and Transient Ischemic AttacksStroke, 1999
- ADC mapping by means of a single-shot spiral MRI technique with application in acute cerebral ischemiaMagnetic Resonance in Medicine, 1999
- Time Course of Lesion Development in Patients With Acute StrokeStroke, 1998
- Cerebrospinal fluid‐suppressed high‐resolution diffusion imaging of human brainMagnetic Resonance in Medicine, 1997
- Single-shot diffusion MRI of human brain on a conventional clinical instrumentMagnetic Resonance in Medicine, 1996
- A Model to Predict the Histopathology of Human Stroke Using Diffusion and T2-Weighted Magnetic Resonance ImagingStroke, 1995
- Acute human stroke studied by whole brain echo planar diffusion‐weighted magnetic resonance imagingAnnals of Neurology, 1995
- Apparent diffusion coefficient mapping of experimental focal cerebral ischemia using diffusion‐weighted echo‐planar imagingMagnetic Resonance in Medicine, 1993
- CSF‐suppressed quantitative single‐shot diffusion imagingMagnetic Resonance in Medicine, 1991