Abstract
To investigate the diagnostic value of quantitative parameters of spectral computed tomography (CT) in ischaemic stroke areas. The medical records of 57 patients with acute ischaemic stroke (AIS) who underwent plain computed tomography (CT) head scans, CT angiography (CTA), and CT perfusion (CTP) were retrospectively reviewed. The ischaemic areas (including the core infarct area and penumbra) and non-ischaemic areas in each patient were quantitatively analyzed using F-STROKE software. Two independent readers measured the corresponding values of the spectroscopic quantitative parameters (effective atomic number [Zeff value], iodine density value, and iodine-no-water value) in the ischaemic area and contralateral normal area alone. The differences in spectroscopic quantitative parameters between the two groups were compared, and their diagnostic efficacy was obtained. The Zeff, iodine-no-water value, and iodine density value of the ischaemic area all showed significant lower than those of non-ischaemic tissue (P < 0.001). For differentiating the ischaemic area from non-ischaemic tissue, the area under the curve (AUC) of the Zeff value reached 0.869 (cut-off value: 7.385; sensitivity: 93.0%; specificity: 70.2%), the AUC of the iodine density value reached 0.932 (cut-off value: 0.235; sensitivity: 91.2%; specificity: 82.5%), and the AUC of the iodine-no-water value reached 0.922 (cut-off value: 0.205; sensitivity: 96.5%; specificity: 78.9%). The study showed the spectral CT would be a potential novel rapid method for identifying AIS. The spectral CT quantitative parameters (Zeff, iodine density values, and iodine-no-water values) can effectively differentiate the ischaemic area from non-ischaemic tissue in stroke patients.
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