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BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: The goal of this study was to evaluate the utility of perfusion-weighted CT (PWCT) in predicting final infarct volume and clinical outcome in patients with acute middle cerebral artery (MCA) stroke. METHODS: Twenty-two consecutive patients with MCA stem occlusion who underwent intra-arterial thrombolysis within 6 hours of stroke onset had noncontrast CT and CT angiography with whole-brain PWCT imaging before treatment. Infarct volumes were computed from the initial PWCT and follow-up scans; clinical outcome was measured with the modified Rankin scale. RESULTS: Initial PWCT lesion volumes correlated significantly with final infarct volume (P=0.0002) and clinical outcome (P=0.01). For the 10 patients with complete recanalization, the relationship between initial and final lesion volume was especially strong (R(2)=0.94, P100 mL or no recanalization had poor outcomes (Rankin scores, 4 to 6). Mean admission NIH Stroke Scale scores and mean lesion volumes in the poor outcome group were significantly different compared with the good or fair outcome (Rankin scores, 0 to 3) group (21+/-4 versus 17+/-5, P=0.05, and 106+/-79 versus 29+/-37 mL, P=0.01). Patients with initial volumes 100 mL are associated with a poor clinical outcome. In these highly selected patients, initial PWCT lesion volume was a stronger predictor of clinical outcome than was initial NIH Stroke Scale score.
Lev et al. (Sat,) studied this question.