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American Journal of Neuroradiology, Vol 17, Issue 5 873-886, Copyright © 1996 by American Society of Neuroradiology


ARTICLES

Proton MR spectroscopy in acute middle cerebral artery stroke

JH Gillard, PB Barker, PC van Zijl, RN Bryan and SM Oppenheimer
Department of Radiology, Johns Hopkins Medical Institutions, Baltimore, Md, USA.

PURPOSE: To investigate the feasibility of performing multisection proton MR spectroscopy in patients with acute stroke, and to determine whether this imaging technique can depict ischemic or infarcted brain regions. METHODS: Multisection proton MR spectroscopy, MR imaging, and MR angiography were performed within 24 hours of stroke onset (mean, 12 hours) in 12 patients who had had a stroke of the middle cerebral artery. Spectra were analyzed from brain regions containing T2 hyperintensity abnormalities on MR images, from regions immediately adjacent to these abnormalities, and from anatomically similar contralateral regions. Areas of brain containing lactate were compared with areas of T2 hyperintensities on MR images. RESULTS: One data set was discarded because of excessive artifacts from patient motion. Regions of T2 hyperintensities on MR images were found to contain elevated lactate (all 11 cases) and reduced N-acetyl-aspartate (10 of 11 cases) relative to contralateral measurements. Lactate levels in regions adjacent to T2 hyperintensities were not significantly different from those of infarcted brain. On the other hand, N-acetyl- aspartate was significantly lower in regions of infarction compared with periinfarct tissue. Areas of brain containing elevated lactate significantly exceeded those of T2 abnormality. CONCLUSIONS: Proton MR spectroscopy is feasible for imaging patients with acute stroke. In the early stages of stroke, tissue containing elevated lactate but no other spectroscopic or MR imaging abnormality can be identified. Such regions may represent an ischemic zone at risk of infarction.


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