Describe Acute Ischemic Stroke on CT vs MRI.

Introduction

  • Acute ischemic stroke results from sudden interruption of cerebral blood flow, leading to neuronal injury and infarction.
  • Imaging is crucial for early detection, differentiating ischemic from hemorrhagic stroke, determining the extent, and guiding therapy (e.g., thrombolysis, thrombectomy).
  • The time factor is critical—“Time is Brain”—as irreversible neuronal death can occur within minutes to hours.

Non-Contrast CT (NCCT)

Role

  • First-line imaging in acute stroke due to speed, availability, and ability to exclude hemorrhage.
  • Often normal in first few hours—subtle signs must be recognized.

Acute Ischemic Signs on CT

Early signs (within 6 hours)

  1. Loss of gray–white matter differentiation
    • Effacement of cortical sulci.
    • Blurring of basal ganglia margins.
  2. Loss of insular ribbon sign
    • Particularly in MCA infarcts due to vulnerability of the insular cortex.
  3. Obscuration of lentiform nucleus
  4. Hyperdense artery sign
    • Hyperdense MCA sign = acute intraluminal thrombus.
    • Seen within minutes.
  5. Sulcal effacement
  6. ASPECTS score
    • Alberta Stroke Program Early CT Score; each MCA territory region scored to assess infarct core.

Late signs (after 24 hours)

  • Well-defined hypodensity in vascular territory.
  • Mass effect with midline shift in large infarcts.
  • Effacement of ventricles.

MRI in Acute Ischemic Stroke

Role

  • Most sensitive for early ischemic changes.
  • Detects infarcts within minutes of onset, before CT becomes positive.
  • Used when diagnosis is uncertain, in posterior fossa stroke, or in young patients.

Key MRI Sequences

1. Diffusion-Weighted Imaging (DWI)

  • Earliest abnormality—detects cytotoxic edema within minutes.
  • Acute infarct = hyperintense on DWI, hypointense on ADC map (restricted diffusion).
  • Stays positive for ~10–14 days.

2. Apparent Diffusion Coefficient (ADC)

  • Confirms true restricted diffusion.
  • ADC drop in acute phase, pseudonormalizes at 1–2 weeks.

3. Fluid-Attenuated Inversion Recovery (FLAIR)

  • Becomes abnormal after ~3–6 hours.
  • Hyperintensity in affected cortex/white matter; useful for “DWI-FLAIR mismatch” .

4. T2-weighted Imaging

  • Hyperintensity develops later; less sensitive in early phase.

5. Gradient Echo / Susceptibility-Weighted Imaging (GRE/SWI)

  • Detects hemorrhagic transformation or microbleeds.
  • Can detect blooming from thrombus (“susceptibility vessel sign”).

6. MR Angiography (MRA)

  • Detects arterial occlusion, stenosis.

CT vs MRI – Comparative Table

FeatureCT (NCCT)MRI (DWI/MRI protocol)
SpeedVery fast (few minutes)Slower (~15–30 min)
AvailabilityWidely availableLimited in some centers
Sensitivity (early)Low in first 3–6 hrsVery high (DWI detects in minutes)
Hemorrhage detectionExcellentGood (SWI/GRE), but CT preferred for acute
Posterior fossaPoor sensitivityExcellent
Therapy decisionPrimary tool for IV tPA decisionUseful for wake-up strokes / unclear onset

Imaging Timeline in Acute Stroke

  • < 6 hrs: CT often normal → look for subtle signs. MRI DWI positive.
  • 6–24 hrs: CT hypodensity appears. MRI clearly shows infarct.
  • > 24 hrs: Both CT and MRI show well-defined infarct.

Teaching Points

  • Always exclude hemorrhage first before thrombolysis.
  • DWI is gold standard for early detection; NCCT is gold standard for excluding hemorrhage.
  • Posterior fossa infarcts: MRI far superior.
  • Hyperdense MCA sign is an early CT marker of large-vessel occlusion.

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