Abstract

This study sought to investigate the occurrence of retinal diffusion restrictions (RDR) in branch retinal arteriolar occlusion (BRAO) using standard brain diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI). Two radiologists assessed DWI MRI scans of BRAO patients for RDR in a retrospective cohort study. Inter- and intrarater reliability were calculated using Kappa statistics. Detection rates of RDR were compared among MRI scans with varying field strength, sequence type and onset-to-DWI time intervals. 85 BRAO patients (63.1 ± 16.5 years) and 89 DWI scans were evaluated. Overall sensitivity of RDR in BRAO was 46.1% with visually correlating low ADC signal in 56.1% of cases. Localization of RDR matched distribution of fundoscopic retinal edema in 85% of patients. Inter- and intra-rater agreement for RDR in BRAO was κinter = 0.64 (95% CI 0.48–0.80) and κintra = 0.87 (95% CI 0.76–0.96), respectively. RDR detection rate tended to be higher for 3T, when compared to 1.5T MRI scans (53.7% vs. 34.3%%; p = 0.07). RDR were identified within 24 h up to 2 weeks after onset of visual impairment. RDR in BRAO can be observed by means of standard stroke DWI in a substantial proportion of cases, although sensitivity and interrater reliability were lower than previously reported for complete central retinal artery occlusion.

Highlights

  • This study sought to investigate the occurrence of retinal diffusion restrictions (RDR) in branch retinal arteriolar occlusion (BRAO) using standard brain diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI)

  • RDR in BRAO can be observed by means of standard stroke DWI in a substantial proportion of cases, sensitivity and interrater reliability were lower than previously reported for complete central retinal artery occlusion

  • BRAO patients treated at our institution between January 2010 and December 2019 with available brain diffusion-weighted imaging performed within 2 weeks after clinical onset were included in this single center retrospective cohort study

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Summary

Introduction

This study sought to investigate the occurrence of retinal diffusion restrictions (RDR) in branch retinal arteriolar occlusion (BRAO) using standard brain diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI). Two radiologists assessed DWI MRI scans of BRAO patients for RDR in a retrospective cohort study. Detection rates of RDR were compared among MRI scans with varying field strength, sequence type and onset-to-DWI time intervals. RDR in BRAO can be observed by means of standard stroke DWI in a substantial proportion of cases, sensitivity and interrater reliability were lower than previously reported for complete central retinal artery occlusion. Retinal diffusion restrictions (RDR) were identified as a characteristic finding on standard brain diffusion-weighted magnetic resonance imaging (DWI MRI) in CRAO p­ atients[5,6,7,8,9], which may aid in the diagnosis of retinal ischemia. We sought to investigate the occurrence of RDR in BRAO within the scope of a larger retrospective cohort study

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