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Title: Susceptibility-weighted imaging for cerebral microbleed detection in super-acute ischemic stroke patients treated with intravenous thrombolysis. Author: Bai Q, Zhao Z, Sui H, Xie X, Chen J, Yang J, Zhang L. Journal: Neurol Res; 2013 Jul; 35(6):586-93. PubMed ID: 23561793. Abstract: OBJECTIVE: Fast magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and susceptibility-weighted imaging (SWI) methods may provide more accurate detection of the highly variant time window for successful intravenous (IV) thrombolytic drug treatment (averaging 3 hours) for cerebral microbleeds (CMBs) in acute stroke patients. METHODS: This prospective study applies fast MRI and SWI for examination of 279 prescreened ischemic stroke patients within 12 hours of stroke onset. One hundred and sixty-two (58.1%) of 279 patients were diagnosed with super-acute ischemic stroke with restricted diffusion, hyperintense diffusion-weighted imaging signals, and no ischemic change in T2-weighted imaging, fluid-attenuated inversion recovery, or T1-weighted imaging signals. Recombinant tissue plasminogen activator IV thrombolysis was administered to 113 (69.75%) patients (thrombolysis group). All patients underwent regular sequence MRI and SWI follow-up. RESULTS: Computed tomography and MRI sequence scans revealed hemorrhagic transformations in 13 (11.50%) thrombolysis and four (8.16%) non-thrombolysis group patients. MRI-guided thrombolysis treatment produced no significant differences between the two groups. SWI revealed new CMBs in 46 (40.70%) and nine (18.37%) thrombolysis and non-thrombolysis group patients, respectively. Significantly better National Institutes of Health stroke scale (24 hours) (P<0.05), modified Rankin scale (90 days) (P<0.01), and life quality Barthal index scores were observed in CMB patients (P<0.01). CONCLUSIONS: SWI revealed higher CMB incidence and clinical improvement in recombinant tissue plasminogen activator IV thrombolysis-treated super-acute ischemic stroke patients, suggesting that CMBs may indicate vascular re-canalization/reperfusion. Thus, SWI can be applied to extend individual patient windows for thrombolytic treatment beyond general recommendations of treatment within 3 hours, allowing treatment up to 12 hours from stroke onset.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]