Correlation of clinical and computed tomographic findings in stroke patients.

Author:

Sotaniemi K A1,Pyhtinen J1,Myllylä V V1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Neurology, University of Oulu, Finland.

Abstract

We evaluated the correlation between clinical features and computed tomographic findings in a prospective study of 1,191 consecutive patients with acute cerebrovascular disease seen during 1 year. In the 386 patients in whom symptoms and signs initially suggested a cerebrovascular disorder, computed tomography revealed a relevant lesion in 154 (hemorrhagic in 52 [33.8%], ischemic in 102 [66.2%]) and a significant nonstroke abnormality in 14 (3.1%). Among the remaining 805 patients with symptoms and signs suggesting some central nervous system disorder other than stroke, computed tomography revealed a cerebrovascular lesion in 38 (4.7%); 35 of these lesions were ischemic. The computed tomographic findings was compatible with the final clinical diagnosis in 192 (84.2%) of the 228 patients with lesions. In the entire sample of 1,191 patients, a cerebrovascular disorder would have been missed in 38 (3.2%) without computed tomography. On the other hand, computed tomography failed to visualize a cerebrovascular lesion in 40 patients in whom such a lesion was clinically obvious. Our results emphasize that both careful neurologic assessment and a policy of early computed tomography are of crucial importance in the diagnosis of stroke and for therapeutic considerations.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Advanced and Specialized Nursing,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine,Neurology (clinical)

Reference38 articles.

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2. Radiological evaluation of ischemic cerebrovascular syndromes with emphasis on computed tomography;Houser OW;Radiol Clin North Am,1982

3. Weisberg LA Nice C Katz M: Cerebral Computed Tomography. A Text Atlas. Philadelphia WB Saunders Co 1984

4. The prognostic value of the CT scan in conservatively treated patients with intracerebral hematoma.

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