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X-ray computed tomography (CT) study of small, deep and recent infarcts (SDRIs) of the cerebral hemispheres in adults. Preliminary and critical report.

The evolution of CT signs of small, deep infarcts of the cerebral hemispheres in thirty adults, in the first five weeks, has been retrospectively studied. The relevant literature has been reviewed and an attempt has been made to present a synthesis, accompanied by a commentary. It is impossible now to give the frequency of each type of evolution, but the main data are as follows: The shortest delay of visibility of an hypodense area is about 17 to 19 h, but at 27 h the densities may still be normal. The evolution of the hypodense area is also variable: after a minimum attenuation is reached--at approximately 72 h--there is a risk of "fogging effect", which reduces the visibility of ischemic lesions; it could be seen from the end of the 1st week to the beginning of the 4th, but its frequency and its duration have yet to be better determined. In our series, contrast enhancement has been found in the gray matter of the basal ganglia between the 8th and the 22nd days--but according to some observations recorded in the literature, it may be found from the second to the twenty sixth day--and there was no obvious contrast enhancement in the white matter. The significance of the evolving CT signs is discussed in connection with the clinical applications, principally in the management of these patients, and with the attempts to correlate the clinical and CT findings.

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