Purpose: Hypertensive encephalopathy, a complex of cerebral disorders, including headache, seizures, visual disturbances, and other neurologic manifestations, is associated with a variety of conditions in which blood pressure rises acutely. It has been ascribed to either exuberant vasospasm with ischemia/infarction or breakthrough of autoregulation with interstitial edema. Diffusion-weighted MR imaging may be used to determine whether the edema in hypertensive encephalopathy is cytotoxic or vasogenic in origin.
Methods: Diffusion-weighted imaging was performed using the double line scan diffusion imaging technique on a 1.5-T MR system. Seven patients with hypertensive encephalopathy were imaged within 1 day of the onset of their symptoms. Apparent diffusion coefficient maps as well as low and high b-factor images were acquired. The two-tailed paired Student's t-test was used to compare the apparent diffusion coefficients in edematous brain regions with those of normal white matter.
Results: In all cases the apparent diffusion coefficient maps of the patients with hypertensive encephalopathy showed increased signal in regions corresponding to increased T2 signal on standard T2-weighted (low b-factor) images. Quantitative apparent diffusion coefficients in regions of abnormal T2 signal were 1.36 +/- 0.14 microm2/ms, compared with 0.80 +/- 0.05 microm2/ms in normal white matter. Diffusion-weighted (high b-factor) T2-weighted images did not show abnormal signal.
Conclusion: Diffusion-weighted MR imaging shows that the edema in hypertensive encephalopathy is of vasogenic origin and does not represent ischemia or infarction. This finding may have therapeutic implications.