Introduction: An accurate diagnosis is frequently difficult in early stroke. Diffusion-weighted (DW) magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) allows visualization of ischemic parenchyma and quantitative assessment of tissue changes before unequivocal abnormalities appear on T(2)-weighted MRI.
Methods: We analyzed 105 MRI examinations of patients with acute stroke (<24 h) with regard to patterns of abnormalities in T(2)-weighted and DW MRI. Furthermore we assessed the influence of artifacts related to DW echo-planar single-shot MRI on image interpretation.
Results: Depending on the time of patient assessment there were three partly overlapping T(2)/DW patterns: (1) in the very early phase (</=1.5 h after symptom onset) there was no T(2) abnormality and no definite abnormality of diffusion; (2) no T(2) abnormality and restricted diffusion (1.5-4 h); (3) T(2) hyperintensity and restricted diffusion (>/=3 h). Typical artifacts (susceptibility distortions, N/2 artifact, chemical shift artifact and eddy currents artifact) had to be considered when interpreting images.
Conclusions: Provided typical artifacts are taken into consideration, echo-planar DW MRI allows a more precise diagnostic assessment in acute stroke.