Editor’s Choice
February 2015
(2 of 3)
FLAIR images from over 140 patients with acute MCA infarctions were analyzed and compared with images used to estimate the ischemic penumbra. A FLAIR-DWI mismatch was seen in 72% of patients and the authors concluded that this may be used to identify the ischemic penumbra.
Abstract
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE
In acute stroke with proximal artery occlusion, FLAIR vascular hyperintensities observed beyond the boundaries of the cortical lesion on DWI (newly defined “FLAIR vascular hyperintensity–DWI mismatch”) may be a marker of tissue at risk of infarction. Our aim was to compare the occurrence of FLAIR vascular hyperintensity–DWI mismatch relative to that of perfusion-weighted imaging–DWI mismatch in patients with proximal MCA occlusion before IV thrombolysis.
MATERIALS AND METHODS
In 141 consecutive patients with proximal MCA occlusion, 2 independent observers analyzed FLAIR images for the presence of FLAIR vascular hyperintensity–DWI mismatch before IV thrombolysis. PWI-DWI mismatch was defined as Volumehypoperfusion > 1.8 × VolumeDWI, with Volumehypoperfusion > 6 seconds on time to maximum value of the residue function maps in the 94 patients with available PWI. The presence of FLAIR vascular hyperintensity–DWI mismatch, PWI-DWI mismatch, and infarct growth on 24-hour follow-up DWI was compared.
RESULTS
A FLAIR vascular hyperintensity–DWI mismatch was present in 102/141 (72%) patients, with an excellent interobserver reliability (κ = 0.91), and a PWI-DWI mismatch, in 61 of the 94 (65%) patients with available PWI. FLAIR vascular hyperintensity–DWI mismatch predicted PWI-DWI mismatch with a sensitivity of 92% (95% CI, 85%–99%) and a specificity of 64% (95% CI, 47%–80%). Patients with FLAIR vascular hyperintensity–DWI mismatch had smaller initial DWI lesion and larger infarct growth (P < .001) than patients without FLAIR vascular hyperintensity–DWI mismatch, even though their final infarcts remained smaller (P < .001).
CONCLUSIONS
Albeit being moderately specific, probably due to inclusion of oligemic tissue, the FLAIR vascular hyperintensity–DWI mismatch identifies large PWI-DWI mismatch with high sensitivity.