Ischemic stroke is a common and serious disorder. Worldwide, stroke is a leading cause of death and disability. In the United States, the incidence is of about 795,000 each year 1 . In Brazil, stroke is a leading cause of mortality, and age-adjusted mortality rates for stroke are higher than in other South American countries 2 .In the recent years, the development of new therapeutic techniques for hyperacute ischemic stroke has created a prompt need of a more precise diagnosis of this entity 3 . As well as the identification of ischemic lesions, the definition of the extent and location of the infarct are also key factors in the therapeutic decisions. Non-contrast computed tomography (CT) can confidently rule out a hemorrhagic stroke, but in a great percentage of patients it can be a false negative in the detection of lesions in the first hours of stroke 1 . In contrast, magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) is a reliable tool to detect cytotoxic brain edema. Perfusion sequences allow detection of mismatch areas, and MR-angiography detects arterial flow abnormalities. However, MRI is not always available in all emergency units and it has higher costs than CT. Multimodal CT has also been increasingly used for this purpose, being a very fast and reliable imaging examination, very adequate for an emergency situation 4 . The paper in this issue of Arquivos de Neuropsiquiatria: "Multiparametric multidetector computed tomography scanning of hyperacute ischemic stroke: validating a standardized protocol" by Pacheco et al. 5 suggests a multimodal protocol for hyperacute ischemic stroke including non-contrast CT, CT-perfusion and CT-angiography (CT-angio). This paper also presents an interesting step-by-step orientation for the interpretation of these exams, as well as the role of the reader experience in the final detection of ischemic stroke.The development of multidetector CT equipments allowed that CT-perfusion and CT-angio could be performed easily in a few minutes. The association of information of these different modalities of CT (also called multimodal CT imaging or multiparametric multidetector CT scanning) has been increasingly used for acute stroke imaging. The rationale of the use of multimodal CT scanning is to rule out or demonstrate hemorrhagic stroke or clearly visible large infarcts (nonenhanced CT), to define the location and extent of ischemia and to characterize salvageable brain tissue (CT-perfusion), as well as to assess for a possible underlying vessel occlusion or other vascular pathology (CT-angio).Multimodal CT imaging has been proven to allow a more precise diagnosis of hyperacute stroke 6 . In the paper from Pacheco et al. 5 , there was no false negative diagnoses of acute ischemic stroke when the different CT techniques using a standardized reading protocol were associated. The definition of a standardized step-by-step interpretation in multiparametric multidetector CT in the evaluation of the signs of hyperacute stroke can aid in the detection of subtle signs of this type of lesion.