Frequency and Clinical Context of Decreased Apparent Diffusion Coefficient Reversal in the Human Brain
Grant P, He J, Halpern E, Wu O, Schaefer P, Schwamm L, Budzik R, Sorensen A, Koroshetz W, Gonzalez R. Frequency and Clinical Context of Decreased Apparent Diffusion Coefficient Reversal in the Human Brain. Radiology 2001, 221: 43-50. PMID: 11568319, DOI: 10.1148/radiol.2211001523.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsImaging studiesClinical settingVenous sinus thrombosisMagnetic resonance imaging studyOnset of symptomsMR imaging findingsComplicated clinical settingsMR imaging studiesMR imaging examinationsResonance imaging studyGray matter regionsADC lesionsArterial infarctionPersistent symptomsSinus thrombosisClinical outcomesImaging findingsClinical historyImaging examinationsADC decreaseSame periodWhite matterGray matterMatter regionsT2 changesIschemic Stroke: Effects of Etiology and Patient Age on the Time Course of the Core Apparent Diffusion Coefficient
Copen W, Schwamm L, González R, Wu O, Harmath C, Schaefer P, Koroshetz W, Sorensen A. Ischemic Stroke: Effects of Etiology and Patient Age on the Time Course of the Core Apparent Diffusion Coefficient. Radiology 2001, 221: 27-34. PMID: 11568317, DOI: 10.1148/radiol.2211001397.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsPatient ageApparent diffusion coefficientInfarct etiologyYounger patientsTime courseMagnetic resonance imaging examinationsRelative ADCEffect of etiologyRelative apparent diffusion coefficientLesion apparent diffusion coefficientNormal-appearing brainSignificant age-related differencesEtiology of lesionsStroke onsetIschemic strokeMedian ageOlder patientsSubgroup analysisAge-related differencesImaging examinationsPatientsADC progressionEtiologyLacunesAge