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Research ArticleBrain

Comparison of Fluid-attenuated Inversion-recovery MR Imaging with CT in a Simulated Model of Acute Subarachnoid Hemorrhage

Kyo Noguchi, Hikaru Seto, Yuichi Kamisaki, Gakuto Tomizawa, Shinichiro Toyoshima and Naoto Watanabe
American Journal of Neuroradiology May 2000, 21 (5) 923-927;
Kyo Noguchi
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Hikaru Seto
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Yuichi Kamisaki
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Gakuto Tomizawa
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Shinichiro Toyoshima
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Naoto Watanabe
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Abstract

BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Because MR imaging is becoming integral to the evaluation and treatment of very early stroke, it is critical to prove that MR imaging is at least as sensitive to acute subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH) as is CT. The present study was conducted to evaluate the possibility of detecting a small amount of acute SAH diluted by CSF not revealed by CT but identified on fluid-attenuated inversion-recovery (FLAIR) MR images in an in vitro study.

METHODS: Acute SAH was simulated with mixtures of artificial CSF and arterial blood (hematocrit [Hct], 45%) ranging from 0% to 100% by volume. We scanned these phantoms with CT and turbo-FLAIR MR imaging (9000/119 [TR/effective TE]; inversion time, 2200 ms; echo train length, 7), and we measured T1 and T2 relaxation times of these phantoms at temperatures within 36° C to 37° C. Plots of CT value from the different blood/water mixture ratios versus Hct were generated and correlated with the average CT value from normal cortex. We measured T1 and T2 relaxation times of these phantoms and normal cortex and generated T2 relaxation curves as a function of effective TE for a specific inversion time (2200), and determined the TR (9000) for the turbo-FLAIR sequence by using a theoretical equation for the turbo inversion recovery signal intensity.

RESULTS: Above a Hct of 27% blood, the mixture was denser on CT scans than was the normal cortex. At a selected time longer than an effective TE of 120, above a Hct of 22.4% blood, the mixture was more hyperintense than the normal cortex on turbo-FLAIR images. At selected times longer than an effective TE of 160, above a Hct of 9% blood, the mixture was more hyperintense than was the normal cortex.

CONCLUSION: FLAIR imaging is more sensitive than CT in the detection of a small amount of acute SAH diluted by CSF at selected appropriate TE, as determined in an in vitro study.

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American Journal of Neuroradiology
Vol. 21, Issue 5
1 May 2000
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Cite this article
Kyo Noguchi, Hikaru Seto, Yuichi Kamisaki, Gakuto Tomizawa, Shinichiro Toyoshima, Naoto Watanabe
Comparison of Fluid-attenuated Inversion-recovery MR Imaging with CT in a Simulated Model of Acute Subarachnoid Hemorrhage
American Journal of Neuroradiology May 2000, 21 (5) 923-927;

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Comparison of Fluid-attenuated Inversion-recovery MR Imaging with CT in a Simulated Model of Acute Subarachnoid Hemorrhage
Kyo Noguchi, Hikaru Seto, Yuichi Kamisaki, Gakuto Tomizawa, Shinichiro Toyoshima, Naoto Watanabe
American Journal of Neuroradiology May 2000, 21 (5) 923-927;
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  • Prognostic Value of Labyrinthine 3D-FLAIR Abnormalities in Idiopathic Sudden Sensorineural Hearing Loss
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  • 3D Fluid-Attenuated Inversion Recovery Imaging: Reduced CSF Artifacts and Enhanced Sensitivity and Specificity for Subarachnoid Hemorrhage
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  • Management of Stroke in Infants and Children: A Scientific Statement From a Special Writing Group of the American Heart Association Stroke Council and the Council on Cardiovascular Disease in the Young
  • Evaluation of Hyperintense Vessels on FLAIR MRI for the Diagnosis of Multiple Intracerebral Arterial Stenoses
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  • Reduction of CSF and Blood Flow Artifacts on FLAIR Images of the Brain with k-Space Reordered by Inversion Time at each Slice Position (KRISP)
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