Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Preface
- 1 The importance of specific diagnosis in stroke patient management
- 2 Limitations of current brain imaging modalities in stroke
- 3 Clinical efficacy of CT in acute cerebral ischemia
- 4 Computerized tomographic-based evaluation of cerebral blood flow
- 5 Technical introduction to MRI
- 6 Clinical use of standard MRI
- 7 MR angiography of the head and neck: basic principles and clinical applications
- 8 Stroke MRI in intracranial hemorrhage
- 9 Using diffusion-perfusion MRI in animal models for drug development
- 10 Localization of stroke syndromes using diffusion-weighted MR imaging (DWI)
- 11 MRI in transient ischemic attacks: clinical utility and insights into pathophysiology
- 12 Perfusion-weighted MRI in stroke
- 13 Perfusion imaging with arterial spin labelling
- 14 Clinical role of echoplanar MRI in stroke
- 15 The ischemic penumbra: the evolution of a concept
- 16 New MR techniques to select patients for thrombolysis in acute stroke
- 17 MRI as a tool in stroke drug development
- 18 Magnetic resonance spectroscopy in stroke
- 19 Functional MRI and stroke
- Index
- Plate Section
6 - Clinical use of standard MRI
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 26 August 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Preface
- 1 The importance of specific diagnosis in stroke patient management
- 2 Limitations of current brain imaging modalities in stroke
- 3 Clinical efficacy of CT in acute cerebral ischemia
- 4 Computerized tomographic-based evaluation of cerebral blood flow
- 5 Technical introduction to MRI
- 6 Clinical use of standard MRI
- 7 MR angiography of the head and neck: basic principles and clinical applications
- 8 Stroke MRI in intracranial hemorrhage
- 9 Using diffusion-perfusion MRI in animal models for drug development
- 10 Localization of stroke syndromes using diffusion-weighted MR imaging (DWI)
- 11 MRI in transient ischemic attacks: clinical utility and insights into pathophysiology
- 12 Perfusion-weighted MRI in stroke
- 13 Perfusion imaging with arterial spin labelling
- 14 Clinical role of echoplanar MRI in stroke
- 15 The ischemic penumbra: the evolution of a concept
- 16 New MR techniques to select patients for thrombolysis in acute stroke
- 17 MRI as a tool in stroke drug development
- 18 Magnetic resonance spectroscopy in stroke
- 19 Functional MRI and stroke
- Index
- Plate Section
Summary
Introduction
MRI is supremely sensitive to the abnormal accumulation of water, much more so than is CT, so it might be expected that MRI is superior to CT in the detection of ischemic infarction. Although this principle is applicable to subacute infarction, it is not the case in the first 6 hours after the onset of the ischemic insult. A basic understanding of the pathological processes which precede infarction is necessary in order to understand their MRI manifestations.
Pathology of ischemic infarction
Deprivation of oxygen supply to neurones, whether as a result of embolus, thrombosis or prolonged hypotension, leads initially to malfunction in as little as a few seconds, e.g. a Stokes-Adams attack, in which brainstem ischemia induces unconsciousness within seconds of cardiac asystole. If the ischemic insult is prolonged the highly energy dependent sodium pump mechanism, which is responsible for maintaining a tenfold difference in extracellular to intracellular sodium concentration, begins to fail and sodium, water and calcium ions pass from the extracellular to the intracellular space. The cell swells, producing ‘cytotoxic’ edema and the extracellular space is simultaneously reduced. If the diminished oxygen supply is maintained, the less energy-dependent capillary endothelial cells start to lose their function and the normally tight junctions between them begin to lose their integrity. Intravascular fluid leaks into the extravascular space, producing ‘vasogenic’ edema. Vasogenic edema spreads easily through the white matter due to its relatively less dense cellular density and more capacious extravascular space.
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- Magnetic Resonance Imaging in Stroke , pp. 69 - 84Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2003
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