Objective: Noncontrast computed tomography (NCCT) plus computed tomography angiography (CTA) is the standard imaging modality for acute stroke. We investigated whether there is an additional diagnostic value of supra-aortic CTA in relation to National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale (NIHSS) and resultant effective radiation dose.

Methods: In this observational study, 788 patients with suspected acute stroke were included and divided into 3 NIHSS groups: group 1, NIHSS 0-2; group 2, NIHSS 3-5; and group 3, NIHSS ≥ 6.Computed tomography scans were assessed for findings of acute ischemic stroke and vascular pathologies in 3 regions. Final diagnosis was obtained from medical records. Effective radiation dose was calculated based on the dose-length product.

Results: Seven hundred forty-one patients were included. Group 1 had 484 patients, group 2 had 127 patients, and group 3 had 130 patients. Computed tomography diagnosis of acute ischemic stroke was made in 76 patients. In 37 patients, a diagnosis of acute stroke was made based on pathologic CTA findings in case of an unremarkable NCCT. Stroke occurrence was the lowest in groups 1 and 2, with 3.6% and 6.3%, respectively, compared with 12.7% in group 3. If both NCCT and CTA were positive, the patient was discharged with a stroke diagnosis. Male sex had the highest effect on the final stroke diagnosis. The mean effective radiation dose was 2.6 mSv.

Conclusions: In female patients with NIHSS 0-2, additional CTA rarely contains relevant additional findings decisive for treatment decisions or overall patient outcomes; therefore, CTA in this patient group might yield less impactful findings, and the applied radiation dose could be lowered by approximately 35%.

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