Background and purpose: Inflammation contributes to brain damage caused by ischemic stroke. Ultrasmall superparamagnetic iron oxide (USPIO)-enhanced MRI allows noninvasive monitoring of macrophage recruitment into ischemic brain lesions. In this study, we determined the extent of USPIO enhancement during early stages of ischemic stroke.
Methods: Twelve consecutive patients with typical clinical signs of stroke underwent multimodal stroke imaging at 1.5-T within 24 hours of symptom onset. They received intravenous USPIO (ferumoxtran) infusion at 26 to 96 hours (mean, 44 hours) after stroke. A total of four follow-up MRI scans were performed 24 to 36 hours, 48 to 72 hours, 7 to 8 days, and 10 to 11 days after USPIO infusion.
Results: Nine patients were included in the final analysis. Parenchymal USPIO enhancement occurred in 3 of 9 analyzed patients and was mainly evident on T1-weighted spin-echo images. USPIO-dependent signal changes were spatially heterogeneous, reflecting the distinct patterns of hematogenous macrophage infiltration in different lesion types.
Conclusions: Our findings suggest a variable extent and distribution of macrophage infiltration into early ischemic stroke lesions. USPIO-enhanced MRI may help to more specifically target antiinflammatory therapy in patients with stroke.