Focal ischemia may induce pathological alterations in brain areas distant from
the primary lesion. In animal models, exofocal neuron death in the ipsilateral
midbrain has been described after occlusion of the middle cerebral artery
(MCA). Using sequential magnetic resonance imaging (T2- and diffusion-
weighted) at 3 Tesla, we investigated acute ischemic stroke patients on days
1, 2, 6, 8, and 10 after stroke onset. Sixteen consecutive patients who had
suffered a stroke involving the caudate nucleus and/or putamen of either
hemisphere were recruited into the study. Four additional patients with
strokes sparing the caudate nucleus and putamen but encompassing at least one-
third of the MCA territory served as controls. Ischemic lesions involving
striatal structures resulted in hyperintense lesions in ipsilateral midbrain
that emerged between days 6 and 10 after stroke and were not present on the
initial scans. In contrast, none of the control stroke patients developed
secondary midbrain lesions. Hyperintense lesions in the pyramidal tract or the
brain stem caused by degeneration of the corticospinal tract could be clearly
distinguished from these secondary midbrain gray matter lesions and were
detectable from day 2 after ischemia. Co-registration of high-resolution
images with a digitized anatomic atlas revealed localization of secondary
lesions primarily in the substantia nigra pars compacta. Apparent diffusion
coefficient (ADC) values in the secondary lesions showed a delayed sharp
decline through day 10. Normalization of ADC values was observed at late
measurements. Taken together, our study demonstrates that striatal infarction
elicits delayed degenerative changes in ipsilateral substantia nigra pars
compacta