The location of an acute ischemic stroke is associated with its prognosis. The widely used Gaussian model-based parameter, apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC), cannot reveal microstructural changes in different locations or the degree of infarction. This prospective observational study was reviewed and approved by the Institutional Review Board of Xiamen Second Hospital, China (approval No. 2014002).Diffusion kurtosis imaging (DKI) was used to detect 199 lesions in 156 patients with acute ischemic stroke (61 males and 95 females), mean age 63.15 ± 12.34 years. A total of 199 lesions were located in the periventricular white matter (n = 52), corpus callosum (n = 14), cerebellum (n = 29), basal ganglia and thalamus (n = 21), brainstem (n = 21) and gray-white matter junctions (n = 62). Percentage changes of apparent diffusion coefficient (ΔADC) and DKI-derived indices (fractional anisotropy [ΔFA], mean diffusivity [ΔMD], axial diffusivity [ΔD], radial diffusivity ΔD, mean kurtosis [ΔMK], axial kurtosis [ΔK], and radial kurtosis [ΔK]) of each lesion were computed relative to the normal contralateral region. The results showed that (1) there was no significant difference in ΔADC, ΔMD, ΔD or ΔD among almost all locations. (2) There was significant difference in ΔMK among almost all locations (except basal ganglia and thalamus vs. brain stem; basal ganglia and thalamus vs. gray-white matter junctions; and brainstem vs. gray-white matter junctions. (3) The degree of change in diffusional kurtosis in descending order was as follows: corpus callosum > periventricular white matter > brainstem > gray-white matter junctions > basal ganglia and thalamus > cerebellum. In conclusion, DKI could reveal the differences in microstructure changes among various locations affected by acute ischemic stroke, and performed better than diffusivity among all groups.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.4103/1673-5374.244791DOI Listing

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