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PT  - JOURNAL ARTICLE
AU  - Wijdicks, Eelco F. M.
AU  - Campeau, Norbert G.
AU  - Miller, Gary M.
TI  - MR Imaging in Comatose Survivors of Cardiac Resuscitation
DP  - 2001 Sep 01
TA  - American Journal of Neuroradiology
PG  - 1561--1565
VI  - 22
IP  - 8
4099  - http://www.ajnr.org/content/22/8/1561.short
4100  - http://www.ajnr.org/content/22/8/1561.full
SO  - Am. J. Neuroradiol.2001 Sep 01; 22
AB  - BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: The prognosis of comatose survivors is determined by clinical examination. Early laboratory indicators of poor prognosis (such as evoked potentials) have low sensitivity. The role of MR imaging as a confirmatory study was investigated.METHODS: We studied fluid-attenuated inversion recovery (FLAIR) and diffusion-weighted (DW) imaging in 10 patients comatose after cardiac arrest.RESULTS: None of the 10 comatose patients had myoclonus status epilepticus or fixed, dilated pupils on neurologic examination, and none had abnormal somatosensory-evoked potentials. Eight patients showed diffuse signal abnormalities, predominantly in the cerebellum (n = 5), the thalamus (n = 8), the frontal and parietal cortices (n = 8), and the hippocampus (n = 9). One patient showed normal MR imaging results, and one patient had abnormalities in the thalamus and cerebellum and minimal abnormality on DW images; both later awakened. None of the patients with abnormal cortical structures on FLAIR MR images recovered beyond a severely disabled state.CONCLUSION: MR imaging in comatose survivors may parallel the pathologic findings in severe anoxic-ischemic injury, and extensive abnormalities may indicate little to no prospects for recovery. If confirmed, MR imaging may have a role as a prognosticating test in anoxic-ischemic coma.