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Diffusion-weighted MR imaging of acute stroke: correlation with T2-weighted and magnetic susceptibility-enhanced MR imaging in cats

📅 Published: December 1, 2024 👤 Michael E. Moseley, John Kucharczyk, Jan Mintorovitch et al. 📖 American Journal of Neuroradiology 📊 901 citations
AI-Generated Summary

We evaluated the temporal and anatomic relationships between changes in diffusion-weighted MR image signal intensity, induced by unilateral occlusion of the middle cerebral artery in cats, and tissue perfusion deficits observed in the same animals on T2-weighted MR images after administration of a nonionic intravascular T2 shortening agent. Close correlations were also found between early increases in diffusion-weighted MR image signal intensity and disrupted phosphorus-31 and proton metabolite...

⚡ This is an original paraphrased summary — not copied from the abstract. Full paper available at the source link below.

Key Findings
  • 1 Diffusion-weighted images obtained with strong diffusion-sensitizing gradient strengths (5.6 gauss/cm, corresponding to gradient attenuation factor, b, values of 1413 sec/mm2) displayed increased signal intensity in the ischemic middle cerebral artery territory less than 1 hr after occlusion, whereas T2-weighted images without contrast usually failed to detect injury for 2-3 hr after stroke.
  • 2 After contrast administration (0.5-1.0 mmol/kg by Dy-DTPA-BMA, IV), however, T2-weighted images revealed perfusion deficits (relative hyperintensity) within 1 hr after middle cerebral artery occlusion that corresponded closely to the anatomic regions of ischemic injury shown on diffusion-weighted MR images.
  • 3 Close correlations were also found between early increases in diffusion-weighted MR image signal intensity and disrupted phosphorus-31 and proton metabolite levels evaluated with surface coil MR spectroscopy, as well as with postmortem histopathology.
Why It Matters

This work deepens our understanding of the fundamental laws governing the universe, from subatomic particles to cosmic structures.

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Article Details
Source OpenAlex
Category ⚛️ Physics & Space Science
Published Dec 1, 2024
Journal American Journal of Neuroradiology
DOI 10.3174/ajnr.45-12.s8
Citations 901
Authors Michael E. Moseley, John Kucharczyk, Jan Mintorovitch, Yoram Cohen, John Kurhanewicz