J Korean Radiol Soc.  2003 Aug;49(2):77-83. 10.3348/jkrs.2003.49.2.77.

Spontaneous Cerebral Microbleeds on Gradient Echo MR Imaging in the Stroke Patients

Affiliations
  • 1Department of Radiology, Chungnam National University College of Medicine.

Abstract

PURPOSE: To investigate the spontaneous cerebral microbleeding occurring at gradient-echo MRI, and its relationship with associated stroke lesions and risk factors.
MATERIALS AND METHODS
Between September 2001 and December, 2002, 32 patients (21 men and 11 women; mean age 63 years) in whom cerebral microbleeding occurred at gradient-echo MRI were retrospectively investigated. Using a 1.5 T MR imager, spin-echo T1-weighted, fast spin-echo T2-weighted, diffusion-weighted, and gradient-echo images were obtained. The number and location of microbleeds seen on gradient echo images, patient data, and associated stroke lesions such as intracerebral hemorrhage and lacunar and territorial infarction were assessed.
RESULTS
Among the 32 patients, 563 microbleeds and between 1 and 66 (mean, 17.6) were noted at gradientecho imaging. Microbleeding occurred in the cortical/subcortical area (n=216), the basal ganglia (n=173), thalamus (n=92), cerebellum (n=41), brainstem (n=36) and corpus callosum (n=1), and in 20 patients was bilateral. Patients had a history of hypertension (n=26), hypertriglycemia (n=12), heart disease (n=4), and diabetes mellitus (n=3). Stroke lesions were seen in 27 patients, intracerebral hemorrhage in ten, lacunar infarction in 24, and territorial infarction in four.
CONCLUSION
The incidence and number of microbleeds was greater in older patients and in those with hypertension, hypertriglycemia, and stroke lesions such as intracerebral hemorrhage or lacunar infarction. The detection of microbleeding at gradient-echo imaging is helpful, since it predicts the possibility of cerebral hemorrhage in these patients.

Keyword

Brain, hemorrhage; Brain, MR; Hemorrhage, MR

MeSH Terms

Basal Ganglia
Brain Stem
Cerebellum
Cerebral Hemorrhage
Corpus Callosum
Diabetes Mellitus
Female
Heart Diseases
Humans
Hypertension
Incidence
Infarction
Magnetic Resonance Imaging*
Male
Retrospective Studies
Risk Factors
Stroke*
Stroke, Lacunar
Thalamus
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