Abstract
Purpose ASPECTS is a robust method for quantifying acute stroke hypodensity on noncontrast CT (NCCT) and helps predict clinical outcome. Whole brain source images obtained with CT angiography (CTA-SI) may increase ischemic brain conspicuity. We sought to determine if CTA-SI is more sensitive than NCCT in detecting acute middle cerebral artery (MCA) infarction and in predicting final infarct size using a modified ASPECT score for lesion delineation.
Materials and Methods After informed consent, we reviewed NCCT and CTA-SI scans of 51 patients with suspected MCA stroke, imaged within 12 hours of symptoms onset, enrolled in a dual-center cohort study. Two blinded neuroimagers rated presence and extent of NCCT and CTA-SI hypodensity using modified ASPECTS. Level of certainty for hypodensity detection was graded on admission and follow-up images using a 5-point scale (5 = definitely present; 1 = definitely absent). Linear regression and receiver operator characteristic (ROC) analyses were performed.
Results Thirty-three patients had confirmed infarction at follow-up (mean 6.5 days). Using certainty levels $ 4 (probable/definite) for ischemic hypodensity, sensitivity for acute stroke detection was 49% with NCCT and 70% with CTA-SI (p = .04, ROC analysis); specificity was 100% for both. Linear regression showed R 2 = .42 (p < .0001) for the correlation between acute NCCT modified ASPECTS and follow-up modified ASPECTS, and .73 (p < .0001) for the correlation between CTA-SI and follow-up modified ASPECTS (p < .0001 for the NCCT/CTA-SI comparison). Conclusion: CTA-SI, compared to NCCT, is more sensitive in detecting early irreversible ischemia and more accurate for final infarct volume prediction using modified ASPECTS.