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BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: (1)H MR spectroscopy can be used to study biochemical changes occurring in the brain in stroke. We used it to examine the relationship between metabolite concentration (N-acetyl aspartate NAA, lactate, cholines and creatines), size of infarct, clinical deficit, and 3-month clinical outcome in patients with middle cerebral artery (MCA) territory infarction. METHODS: Thirty-one patients with acute MCA territory infarction were recruited within 72 hours of the onset of symptoms. Single-voxel short echo time stimulated echo acquistion mode spectroscopy was used to obtain metabolite data from the infarct core. Metabolite concentrations were determined with use of variable projection time domain-fitting analysis. Infarct size was determined with T2-weighted images. Patient outcome groups at 3 months were "independent," "dependent," or "dead." RESULTS: All patients (100%; 95% CI 75% to 100%) who had an infarct >70 mL did poorly. Eighteen of 20 patients (90%; 95% CI 68% to 99%) with a core NAA concentration 7 mmol/L did well. Combining these results showed that all patients who had an initial infarct volume >70 mL did poorly, irrespective of the NAA concentration. Of those patients with infarcts 7 mmol/L did well (88%; 95% CI 47% to 100%), whereas those with a lower NAA concentration did poorly (80%; 95% CI 44% to 97%). There was no association between other metabolite concentrations and outcome. CONCLUSIONS: Infarct volume and NAA concentration can together predict clinical outcome in MCA infarction in humans.
Pereira et al. (Sun,) studied this question.