Oct. 21, 2004 — Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) may be as accurate as
computed tomography (CT) in detecting acute bleeding in the brain in patients
showing signs of stroke, and more accurate than CT in revealing chronic bleeding
in the brain, according to a study in the Oct. 20 issue of the Journal of the
American Medical Association.
Noncontrast computed tomography (CT)
has been the standard brain imaging technique used for the initial evaluation of
patients with acute stroke symptoms, greatly due to its capacity to rule out the
presence of hemorrhage (bleeding), according to background information in the
article. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) has been suggested as an alternative
to CT in an emergency department setting because of its ability to outline the
presence, size, location and extent of hyperacute ischemia (blocked blood
vessel).
Chelsea S. Kidwell, M.D., from the UCLA Medical Center in Los
Angeles and colleagues examined MRIs and CT scans in 200 patients showing signs
of stroke in order to compare their accuracy in detecting acute bleeding in the
brain. The Hemorrhage and Early MRI Evaluation (HEME) study was performed at the
UCLA Medical Center and the Suburban Hospital in Bethesda, Md., between October
2000 and February 2003. The average age of patients was 75 years, and 55 percent
of study participants were women. MRI and CT scans were performed within six
hours of the patients' onset of stroke symptoms.
Researchers stopped the
HEME study early after an unplanned interim analysis revealed that MRI was
detecting acute bleeding not detected by CT. In diagnosing any type of bleeding,
MRI identified 71 positive patients, while CT identified 29 positive patients.
Acute bleeding was diagnosed in 25 participants on both MRI and CT, with four
additional patients identified in MRI scans not found in corresponding CT.
Chronic bleeding, most often microbleeds, was visualized on 49 patient MRIs,
although not on their CT scans.
The authors write: "... MRI may be able
to detect regions of hemorrhagic transformation of an acute ischemic stroke not
evident on CT. Our study confirms the superiority of MRI for detection of
chronic hemorrhage, particularly microbleeds. The role of these findings in the
decision-making process for treatment of patients who are candidates for
thrombolytic (clot-dissolving) therapy is currently unknown."
They
conclude by saying: "... MRI may be acceptable as the sole imaging technique for
acute stroke at centers with expertise in interpreting these
findings."
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