Magnetic resonance imaging may be more sensitive than computed tomography for early detection of stroke

January 01, 0001

Magnetic resonance imaging may be more sensitive than computed tomography for early detection of stroke

Clinical Question:
How effective is the diagnostic accuracy of diffusion-weighted magnetic resonance imaging (DWI) compared to computed tomography (CT) for acute ischaemic stroke, and what is the diagnostic accuracy of DWI for acute haemorrhagic stroke?

Bottom line: There was some evidence that DWI is more accurate than CT for the detection of mild ischaemic strokes in highly selected patients. The 2 studies on haemorrhagic stroke reported high estimates for diffusion-weighted and gradient-echo sequence MRI but had inconsistent reference standards.

Caveat: Given the variability in the quality of included studies and the very selected populations studied, the reliability and generalisability of the observed results are questionable. Practicality and cost-effectiveness issues were not assessed.

Context: DWI is increasingly used for the diagnosis of acute ischaemic stroke but its sensitivity for the early detection of haemorrhagic stroke has been debated. CT is extensively used in the clinical management of acute stroke, especially for the rapid exclusion of haemorrhagic stroke.

Cochrane Systematic Review: Brazzelli M et al. Magnetic resonance imaging versus computed tomography for detection of acute vascular lesions in patients presenting with stroke symptoms. Cochrane Reviews 2009, Issue 4. Article No. CD007424. DOI: 10.1002/14651858. CD007424.pub2. This review contains 8 studies involving 308 participants.

Cochrane PEARLS Practical Evidence About Real Life Situations. No. 243, March 2010.
Written by Brian R McAvoy. Published by the Cochrane Primary Care Group

Category: N. Neurological. Keywords: stroke, diagnosis, imaging, computed tomography, magnetic resonance imaging
Synopsis edited by Dr Linda French, Toledo, Ohio. Posted on Global Family Doctor 3 August 2010


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Pearls are an independent product of the Cochrane primary care group and are meant for educational use and not to guide clinical care.