We hypothesized that quantitative net water uptake (NWU), a novel neuroimaging marker of early brain edema, can predict symptomatic intracranial hemorrhage (sICH) after acute ischemic stroke (AIS).
We enrolled patients with AIS who completed admission multimodal computed tomography (CT) within 24 h after stroke onset. NWU within the ischemic core and penumbra was calculated based on admission CT, namely NWU-core and NWU-penumbra. sICH was defined as the presence of ICH in the infarct area within 7 days after stroke onset, accompanied by clinical deterioration. The predictive value of NWU-core and NWU-penumbra on sICH was evaluated by logistic regression analyses and the receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curve. A pure neuroimaging prediction model was built considering imaging markers, which has the potential to be automatically quantified with an artificial algorithm on image workstation.
154 patients were included, of which 93 underwent mechanical thrombectomy (MT). The median time from symptom onset to admission CT was 262 min (interquartile range, 198–368). In patients with MT, NWU-penumbra (OR =1.442; 95% CI = 1.177–1.766;
NWU-penumbra may have better predictive performance than NWU-core on sICH after MT. A pure imaging model showed potential value to automatically screen patients with sICH risk by image recognition, which may optimize treatment strategy.