Background And Purpose: The development of thrombolytic agents for use with compromised cerebral blood flow has made it critical to quickly identify those patients to best treat. We hypothesized that combined diffusion and perfusion MR imaging adds vital diagnostic value for patients for whom the greatest potential benefits exist and far exceeds the diagnostic value of diffusion MR imaging alone.
Methods: The cases of patients with neurologic symptoms of acute ischemic stroke who underwent ultra-fast emergent MR imaging within 6 hours were reviewed.
Purpose: To determine whether the initial angiographic morphology and location of intracranial arterial occlusions in acute stroke are reliable predictors of success of thrombolysis.
Materials And Methods: Thirty-three intracranial occlusions were studied in 32 patients who underwent intraarterial thrombolysis with urokinase within 6 hours from clinical onset of stroke symptoms. The initial angiographic appearance of each occlusion was categorized as cutoff, tapered, meniscus, tram-track, or tandem.
Objective/hypothesis: To test the hypotheses that 1) magnetic resonance imaging (MRI)-guided biopsy and aspiration with an open 0.2-T system (Magnetom Open, Siemens, Erlangen, Germany) in the head and neck is feasible and successful and 2) procedure times can be sufficiently short to be well tolerated by the patient.
Methods: Sixty-one MRI-guided procedures were performed in 47 patients (ages, 6 mo-88 y) in the head and neck, including the mucosal sites and masticator and parapharyngeal spaces (n = 23), parotid space (n = 6), submandibular space (n = 2), cervical vertebral column/paraspinal tissues (n = 8), skull base (n = 3), larynx or hypopharynx (n = 3), and infrahyoid nodal chains and surrounding tissues (n = 16).