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Comparative Study
Early experiences with diffusion tensor imaging and magnetic resonance tractography in stroke patients.
- H Parmar, X Golay, K E Lee, F Hui, and Y Y Sitoh.
- Department of Neuroradiology, National Neuroscience Institute, 11 Jalan Tan Tock Seng, Singapore 308433. parurad@hotmail.com
- Singap Med J. 2006 Mar 1; 47 (3): 198-203.
IntroductionRecent advances in magnetic resonance (MR) diffusion tensor imaging technique enable evaluation of the anisotropy of white matter tracts in-vivo, as well as the integrity of fibre tracts and their orientation. We describe our initial experiences with diffusion tensor imaging and MR tractography techniques to evaluate the structural degeneration of white matter tracts following stroke.MethodsDiffusion tensor imaging data were acquired in 11 cases with stroke on a 3T MR imaging scanner, with three-dimensional diffusion tensor imaging-based colour maps and MR tractography performed offline. We evaluated the spatial relationships of the eloquent white matter tracts to the infarcts and areas of haemorrhage, and classified therewith the tracts as either disrupted or displaced. We compared these with the clinical severity of the neurological deficits and prognosis.ResultsA good correlation was found between tractography findings and patient's clinical recovery. All the patients with disruption of white matter tracts had residual deficits on clinical follow-up, whereas the patients with displaced tracts had near complete neurological recovery.ConclusionDiffusion tensor imaging and MR tractography provide a novel and useful method to directly visualise changes in the white matter tracts in stroke. This can potentially allow clinical-imaging correlation with prognostic potential.
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