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American Journal of Neuroradiology, Vol 17, Issue 7 1245-1253, Copyright © 1996 by American Society of Neuroradiology


ARTICLES

Clinical assessment of MR of the brain in nonsurgical inpatients

JA Hirsch, CP Langlotz, J Lee, CP Tanio, RI Grossman and KA Schulman
Department of Radiology, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia 19104, USA.

PURPOSE: To evaluate the effect of MR imaging of the brain on four domains of patient care: diagnosis, diagnostic workup, therapy, and prognosis. METHODS: Pre- and post-MR written questionnaires and oral interviews were administered to the referring clinicians of 103 medical and neurologic inpatients at a tertiary care institution. Additional information was obtained from radiologic reports and records. RESULTS: The study population had a diverse array of signs and symptoms and of presumptive clinical diagnoses, reflecting the breadth of disease seen at our institution. The vast majority of physicians (89%) reported that MR imaging added significant diagnostic information, playing an important role in guiding diagnostic workup (24%), planning treatment (34%), and estimating prognosis (47%). MR imaging was significantly more likely to decrease than to increase confidence in the presumptive clinical diagnosis. Thus, MR imaging may be most useful in the setting of diagnostic uncertainty. CONCLUSION: Our results show that MR imaging of the brain has important effects on each of the four domains of care for medical inpatients.


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