成像

J. Baron, Steven Warach
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Baron, Steven Warach","doi":"10.1142/9789813279940_0008","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Acute Stroke The Melbourne group reported further application of the positron-emission tomography (PET) hypoxia marker Flabeled fluoromisonidazole (F-MISO).1–3 In one article, they further developed and validated their novel imaging methodology to map the penumbra using this tracer.1 Applying this method, they elegantly showed that hypoxia affects white matter to a similar degree and extent as gray matter, suggesting the former has at least as high a resistance to ischemia than the latter and that its salvage should help to maximize benefit of treatment.2 In a third article,3 they report that the impact of hypoxic tissue escaping infarction on subsequent clinical recovery is similar whether the tissue is identified within 12 hours of, or in the 12and 48-hour interval after stroke onset, documenting that F-MISO identifies true penumbral tissue, and that, consistent with earlier evidence, appropriate interventions should improve outcome even beyond 24 hours. The year 2004 has seen the first, long-awaited, articles reporting direct PET and diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI)/ perfusion-weighted imaging (PWI) comparisons.4–6 Using stateof-the-art diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) and fully quantitative PET as gold standard, Guadagno et al4 documented that the acute DWI lesion not only contains irreversibly damaged, but also penumbral tissue, in agreement with studies showing potential reversibility of the DWI lesion, while even severe apparent diffusion coefficient decreases can be found in either tissue category. One therapeutic implication is that a matched DWI/PWI lesion may still represent, at least in part, salvageable tissue. Comparing the predictive value of DWI and CFlumazenil (FMZ) for final infarction, Heiss et al5 found that although both have similar overall predictive power (around 84% of the final infarct), false-positives occurred with DWI but not with FMZ, consistent with the Guadagno et al findings.4 Assessing the validity of PWI to assess the at-risk tissue by means of PET, Sobesky et al6 concluded that overall the simple DWI-PWI mismatch overestimates the penumbra, but the use of time-to-peak (TTP) delay maps helps toward solving this problem, with TTP delays 4 s being best suited. These results apply specifically to the TTP method of deriving magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) perfusion maps; other methods, such as mean transit time (MTT) maps, may be less prone to overestimate the region of symptomatic ischemia.7 Thijs et al8 found large variations in hypoperfusion lesion size with different arterial input function (AIF) locations used to derive MRI perfusion maps. They found that the AIF derived from the contralateral middle cerebral artery (MCA) gave ischemic volumes that most accurately predicted follow-up lesion volume. The sensitivity of MRI relative to computed tomography (CT) has now been established for acute hemorrhage diagnosis in patients with focal stroke symptoms of less than 6 hours duration. Susceptibility-weighted MRI, most commonly the gradient-recalled echo (GRE) sequence, is used for that purpose. Fiebach et al9 found near perfect discrimination of hemorrhagic from ischemic stroke on MRI in a sample containing 62 cases of each, obtained in 6 hours: 100% sensitivity among experts; 95% sensitivity among medical students after a brief tutorial. Kidwell et al10 prospectively investigated a broad sample of 200 stroke patients, in which MRI followed by CT was obtained in 6 hours. The consensus of 4 experts’ independent, blinded reads found MRI superior for detecting any hemorrhage (because of MRI sensitivity to microand other chronic bleeds) and equivalent for acute hemorrhage, which was diagnosed by both modalities in 25 patients. There were 8 discrepant reads, 4 in either direction, for acute hemorrhage. Three of the discrepant cases of acute hemorrhage on CT were also diagnosed by MRI but classified incorrectly as chronic hemorrhage. However, 4 cases of acute hemorrhagic transformation on MRI were missed on CT. Smaller retrospective series have also reported cases of hemorrhagic transformation evident on susceptibility-weighted MRI but not CT following thrombolytic therapy,11,12 including cases where CT findings were equivocal because of residual angiography contrast.11 As evidence continues to confirm that prethrombolysis severity of clinical or MRI parameters predict outcome with recanalization, so does evidence that resolution of perfusion deficits is predictive of clinical recovery. Singer et al13 reported that greater amounts of at-risk tissue did not progress to infarct among patients who had recanalized relative to those who had not in a sample of 17; 80% of the MTT defect and 78% of the TTP 2 s delayed region did not progress to infarct on follow-up imaging. Chalela et al14 reported in a sample of 42 patients that resolution of at least 30% of the volume of MTT defect by 2 hours after standard IV tissue plasminogen activator treatment was associated with excel-","PeriodicalId":273498,"journal":{"name":"Fundamental OSCE Guide in Ophthalmology","volume":"239 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2019-05-27","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"IMAGING\",\"authors\":\"J. 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The year 2004 has seen the first, long-awaited, articles reporting direct PET and diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI)/ perfusion-weighted imaging (PWI) comparisons.4–6 Using stateof-the-art diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) and fully quantitative PET as gold standard, Guadagno et al4 documented that the acute DWI lesion not only contains irreversibly damaged, but also penumbral tissue, in agreement with studies showing potential reversibility of the DWI lesion, while even severe apparent diffusion coefficient decreases can be found in either tissue category. One therapeutic implication is that a matched DWI/PWI lesion may still represent, at least in part, salvageable tissue. Comparing the predictive value of DWI and CFlumazenil (FMZ) for final infarction, Heiss et al5 found that although both have similar overall predictive power (around 84% of the final infarct), false-positives occurred with DWI but not with FMZ, consistent with the Guadagno et al findings.4 Assessing the validity of PWI to assess the at-risk tissue by means of PET, Sobesky et al6 concluded that overall the simple DWI-PWI mismatch overestimates the penumbra, but the use of time-to-peak (TTP) delay maps helps toward solving this problem, with TTP delays 4 s being best suited. These results apply specifically to the TTP method of deriving magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) perfusion maps; other methods, such as mean transit time (MTT) maps, may be less prone to overestimate the region of symptomatic ischemia.7 Thijs et al8 found large variations in hypoperfusion lesion size with different arterial input function (AIF) locations used to derive MRI perfusion maps. They found that the AIF derived from the contralateral middle cerebral artery (MCA) gave ischemic volumes that most accurately predicted follow-up lesion volume. The sensitivity of MRI relative to computed tomography (CT) has now been established for acute hemorrhage diagnosis in patients with focal stroke symptoms of less than 6 hours duration. Susceptibility-weighted MRI, most commonly the gradient-recalled echo (GRE) sequence, is used for that purpose. Fiebach et al9 found near perfect discrimination of hemorrhagic from ischemic stroke on MRI in a sample containing 62 cases of each, obtained in 6 hours: 100% sensitivity among experts; 95% sensitivity among medical students after a brief tutorial. Kidwell et al10 prospectively investigated a broad sample of 200 stroke patients, in which MRI followed by CT was obtained in 6 hours. The consensus of 4 experts’ independent, blinded reads found MRI superior for detecting any hemorrhage (because of MRI sensitivity to microand other chronic bleeds) and equivalent for acute hemorrhage, which was diagnosed by both modalities in 25 patients. There were 8 discrepant reads, 4 in either direction, for acute hemorrhage. Three of the discrepant cases of acute hemorrhage on CT were also diagnosed by MRI but classified incorrectly as chronic hemorrhage. However, 4 cases of acute hemorrhagic transformation on MRI were missed on CT. 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引用次数: 0

摘要

墨尔本组报道了正电子发射断层扫描(PET)缺氧标志物氟米索硝唑(F-MISO)的进一步应用。1-3在一篇文章中,他们进一步发展并验证了他们使用这种示踪剂绘制半影的新成像方法应用这种方法,他们优雅地表明,缺氧对白质的影响程度与灰质相似,表明前者对缺血的抵抗力至少与后者一样高,其挽救应有助于最大限度地提高治疗效果在第三篇文章中,他们报道,缺氧组织逃离梗死对随后临床恢复的影响是相似的,无论是在中风发作后12小时内,还是在中风发作后12小时和48小时间隔内识别组织,记录F-MISO识别真正的半影组织,并且,与早期证据一致,适当的干预措施应该改善结果,甚至超过24小时。2004年,人们期待已久的文章首次报道了直接PET和弥散加权成像(DWI)/灌注加权成像(PWI)的比较。4-6使用最先进的弥散张量成像(DTI)和全定量PET作为金标准,Guadagno等人4证明急性DWI病变不仅包含不可逆损伤,还包括半暗组织,这与DWI病变潜在可逆性的研究一致,甚至在两种组织类别中都可以发现严重的表观弥散系数下降。一个治疗意义是,匹配的DWI/PWI病变可能仍然代表,至少部分,可修复的组织。比较DWI和c氟马西尼(FMZ)对最终梗死的预测价值,Heiss等人发现,尽管两者具有相似的总体预测能力(约为最终梗死的84%),但DWI出现假阳性,而FMZ没有,这与Guadagno等人的发现一致4通过PET评估PWI评估危险组织的有效性,Sobesky等人得出结论,总体而言,简单的DWI-PWI不匹配高估了半影,但使用时间到峰值(TTP)延迟图有助于解决这一问题,TTP延迟4秒是最合适的。这些结果特别适用于获得磁共振成像(MRI)灌注图的TTP方法;其他方法,如平均传输时间(MTT)图,可能不太容易高估症状性缺血的区域Thijs等人8发现,不同的动脉输入功能(AIF)位置在低灌注损伤大小上有很大的差异,该位置用于得出MRI灌注图。他们发现来自对侧大脑中动脉(MCA)的AIF给出了最准确预测后续病变体积的缺血体积。对于持续时间少于6小时的局灶性脑卒中患者,MRI相对于计算机断层扫描(CT)在急性出血诊断方面的敏感性现已得到证实。敏感性加权MRI,最常见的是梯度回忆回声(GRE)序列,用于此目的。Fiebach等人9发现,在6小时内获得的62例样本中,MRI几乎完美地区分出血性中风和缺血性中风:专家的灵敏度为100%;经过简短的指导,医学生的敏感性为95%。Kidwell等10前瞻性调查了200例脑卒中患者,在6小时内进行MRI和CT检查。4位专家独立、盲法阅读的共识发现,MRI在检测任何出血(因为MRI对微出血和其他慢性出血敏感)方面都具有优势,在检测急性出血方面也相当出色,25名患者通过两种方式诊断出急性出血。急性出血有8个不同的读数,两个方向各4个。3例CT表现不一致的急性出血也被MRI诊断为慢性出血。4例MRI表现为急性出血转化,CT表现为漏诊。较小的回顾性系列也报道了溶栓治疗后,敏感性加权MRI显示出明显的出血转化,而CT却没有,包括由于残余血管造影对比而CT表现不明确的病例随着越来越多的证据证实溶栓前临床或MRI参数的严重程度可以预测再通的结果,灌注缺陷的消退也可以预测临床恢复。Singer等人13报道,在17个样本中,再通的患者与未再通的患者相比,更多的高危组织没有进展为梗死;随访影像显示,80%的MTT缺损和78%的ttp2延迟区未进展为梗死。Chalela等人在42例患者的样本中报道,在标准IV组织型纤溶酶原激活剂治疗2小时后,至少30%的MTT缺损体积的消退与excel-相关
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IMAGING
Acute Stroke The Melbourne group reported further application of the positron-emission tomography (PET) hypoxia marker Flabeled fluoromisonidazole (F-MISO).1–3 In one article, they further developed and validated their novel imaging methodology to map the penumbra using this tracer.1 Applying this method, they elegantly showed that hypoxia affects white matter to a similar degree and extent as gray matter, suggesting the former has at least as high a resistance to ischemia than the latter and that its salvage should help to maximize benefit of treatment.2 In a third article,3 they report that the impact of hypoxic tissue escaping infarction on subsequent clinical recovery is similar whether the tissue is identified within 12 hours of, or in the 12and 48-hour interval after stroke onset, documenting that F-MISO identifies true penumbral tissue, and that, consistent with earlier evidence, appropriate interventions should improve outcome even beyond 24 hours. The year 2004 has seen the first, long-awaited, articles reporting direct PET and diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI)/ perfusion-weighted imaging (PWI) comparisons.4–6 Using stateof-the-art diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) and fully quantitative PET as gold standard, Guadagno et al4 documented that the acute DWI lesion not only contains irreversibly damaged, but also penumbral tissue, in agreement with studies showing potential reversibility of the DWI lesion, while even severe apparent diffusion coefficient decreases can be found in either tissue category. One therapeutic implication is that a matched DWI/PWI lesion may still represent, at least in part, salvageable tissue. Comparing the predictive value of DWI and CFlumazenil (FMZ) for final infarction, Heiss et al5 found that although both have similar overall predictive power (around 84% of the final infarct), false-positives occurred with DWI but not with FMZ, consistent with the Guadagno et al findings.4 Assessing the validity of PWI to assess the at-risk tissue by means of PET, Sobesky et al6 concluded that overall the simple DWI-PWI mismatch overestimates the penumbra, but the use of time-to-peak (TTP) delay maps helps toward solving this problem, with TTP delays 4 s being best suited. These results apply specifically to the TTP method of deriving magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) perfusion maps; other methods, such as mean transit time (MTT) maps, may be less prone to overestimate the region of symptomatic ischemia.7 Thijs et al8 found large variations in hypoperfusion lesion size with different arterial input function (AIF) locations used to derive MRI perfusion maps. They found that the AIF derived from the contralateral middle cerebral artery (MCA) gave ischemic volumes that most accurately predicted follow-up lesion volume. The sensitivity of MRI relative to computed tomography (CT) has now been established for acute hemorrhage diagnosis in patients with focal stroke symptoms of less than 6 hours duration. Susceptibility-weighted MRI, most commonly the gradient-recalled echo (GRE) sequence, is used for that purpose. Fiebach et al9 found near perfect discrimination of hemorrhagic from ischemic stroke on MRI in a sample containing 62 cases of each, obtained in 6 hours: 100% sensitivity among experts; 95% sensitivity among medical students after a brief tutorial. Kidwell et al10 prospectively investigated a broad sample of 200 stroke patients, in which MRI followed by CT was obtained in 6 hours. The consensus of 4 experts’ independent, blinded reads found MRI superior for detecting any hemorrhage (because of MRI sensitivity to microand other chronic bleeds) and equivalent for acute hemorrhage, which was diagnosed by both modalities in 25 patients. There were 8 discrepant reads, 4 in either direction, for acute hemorrhage. Three of the discrepant cases of acute hemorrhage on CT were also diagnosed by MRI but classified incorrectly as chronic hemorrhage. However, 4 cases of acute hemorrhagic transformation on MRI were missed on CT. Smaller retrospective series have also reported cases of hemorrhagic transformation evident on susceptibility-weighted MRI but not CT following thrombolytic therapy,11,12 including cases where CT findings were equivocal because of residual angiography contrast.11 As evidence continues to confirm that prethrombolysis severity of clinical or MRI parameters predict outcome with recanalization, so does evidence that resolution of perfusion deficits is predictive of clinical recovery. Singer et al13 reported that greater amounts of at-risk tissue did not progress to infarct among patients who had recanalized relative to those who had not in a sample of 17; 80% of the MTT defect and 78% of the TTP 2 s delayed region did not progress to infarct on follow-up imaging. Chalela et al14 reported in a sample of 42 patients that resolution of at least 30% of the volume of MTT defect by 2 hours after standard IV tissue plasminogen activator treatment was associated with excel-
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