In medicine, the dense artery sign or hyperdense artery sign is an increased radiodensity of an artery as seen on computer tomography (CT) scans, and is a radiologic sign of early ischemic stroke.[1] In earlier studies of medical imaging in patients with strokes, it was the earliest sign of ischemic stroke in a significant minority of cases.[2] Its appearance portends a poor prognosis for the patient.[3][4]
Identification of the dense artery sign is often based on subjective interpretation and false positives may occur. One study aiming to define criteria for the sign determined that measuring Hounsfield units on the CT scan could differentiate between the dense MCA sign associated with ischemic stroke and that caused by false positives.[8] Specifically, the combination of greater than 43 Hounsfield units and an MCA density ratio of greater than 1.2 was diagnostic of a dense MCA sign associated with acute ischemic stroke.[8]
^ abSchuknecht B, Ratzka M, Hofmann E (1990). "The "dense artery sign"--major cerebral artery thromboembolism demonstrated by computed tomography". Neuroradiology. 32 (2): 98–103. doi:10.1007/BF00588557. PMID2398948.
^Zorzon M, Masè G, Pozzi-Mucelli F, et al. (1993). "Increased density in the middle cerebral artery by nonenhanced computed tomography. Prognostic value in acute cerebral infarction". Eur. Neurol. 33 (3): 256–9. doi:10.1159/000116949. PMID8467850.