RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 Gradient echo MRI JF Neurology JO Neurology FD Lippincott Williams & Wilkins SP 1576 OP 1581 DO 10.1212/WNL.0b013e3181a411df VO 72 IS 18 A1 Copenhaver, B. R. A1 Shin, J. A1 Warach, S. A1 Butman, J. A. A1 Saver, J. L. A1 Kidwell, C. S. YR 2009 UL http://n.neurology.org/content/72/18/1576.abstract AB Background: Recent studies have demonstrated that gradient echo (GRE) MRI sequences are as accurate as CT for the detection of intracerebral hemorrhage (ICH) in the context of acute stroke. However, many physicians who currently read acute stroke imaging studies may be unfamiliar with interpretation of GRE images. Methods: An NIH Web-based training program was developed including a pretest, tutorial, and posttest. Physicians involved in the care of acute stroke patients were encouraged to participate. The tutorial covered acute, chronic, and mimic hemorrhages as they appear on CT, diffusion-weighted imaging, and GRE sequences. Ability of users to identify ICH presence, type, and age on GRE was compared from the pretest to posttest timepoint. Results: A total of 104 users completed the tutorial. Specialties represented included general radiology (42%), general neurology (16%), neuroradiology (15%), stroke neurology (14%), emergency medicine (1%), and other (12%). Median overall score improved pretest to posttest from 66.7% to 83.3%, p < 0.001. Improvement by category was as follows: acute ICH, 66.7%–100%, p < 0.001; chronic ICH, 33.3%–66.7%, p < 0.001; ICH negatives/mimics, 100%–100%, p = 0.787. Sensitivity for identification of acute hemorrhage improved from 68.2% to 96.4%. Conclusions: Physicians involved in acute stroke care achieved significant improvement in gradient echo (GRE) hemorrhage interpretation after completing the NIH GRE MRI tutorial. This indicates that a Web-based tutorial may be a viable option for the widespread education of physicians to achieve an acceptable level of diagnostic accuracy at reading GRE MRI, thus enabling confident acute stroke treatment decisions. AHA/ASA=American Heart Association/American Stroke Association; CME=continuing medical education; DWI=diffusion-weighted imaging; GRE=gradient echo; ICH=intracerebral hemorrhage; tPA=tissue plasminogen activator.