Literature DB >> 19005377

Lower pretreatment cerebral blood volume affects hemorrhagic risks after intra-arterial revascularization in acute stroke.

Archit Bhatt1, Nirav A Vora, Ajith J Thomas, Arshad Majid, Mounzer Kassab, Maxim D Hammer, Ken Uchino, Lawrence Wechsler, Tudor G Jovin, Rishi Gupta.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Intra-arterial therapies are being used more frequently in patients presenting with acute cerebral occlusions, but they have been limited by the potential for hemorrhage. We sought to determine whether pretreatment computed tomography perfusion parameters might help to identify patients at a higher risk of developing intracranial hemorrhage after intra-arterial stroke revascularization treatment.
METHODS: We retrospectively reviewed all patients at the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center and Michigan State University who underwent computed tomography perfusion imaging of the brain before intra-arterial thrombolysis between January 2006 and June 2007. Demographic information, angiographic variables, and types of endovascular interventions were recorded. The mean transit time and cerebral blood volumes were recorded for the ipsilateral and contralateral middle cerebral artery territories. A binary logistic regression model was constructed to determine the independent predictors of developing intracranial hemorrhage.
RESULTS: A total of 57 patients (33 from the University of Pittsburgh and 24 from Michigan State University) with a mean age of 66 +/- 13 years and mean National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale scores of 16 +/- 5 were studied. The overall recanalization (Thrombolysis in Myocardial Infarction Trial scale 2 or 3 flow) was 72% for the cohort, and the overall rate of parenchymal hemorrhage was 5 of 57 (9%) patients. The overall hemorrhage rate was 19 of 57 (33%) patients. The only variable found to be predictive of the development of hemorrhage after intervention was reduced pretreatment cerebral blood volume (odds ratio, 0.49; 95% confidence interval, 0.35-0.91; P < 0.022).
CONCLUSION: A reduced pretreatment ipsilateral cerebral blood volume value before endovascular revascularization of an acute middle cerebral artery or internal carotid artery occlusion significantly increases the risk of an intracranial hemorrhage.

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Year:  2008        PMID: 19005377     DOI: 10.1227/01.NEU.0000333259.11739.AD

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Neurosurgery        ISSN: 0148-396X            Impact factor:   4.654


  8 in total

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3.  Risk assessment of hemorrhagic transformation of acute middle cerebral artery stroke using multimodal CT.

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Authors:  P Krishnan; G Saposnik; B Ovbiagele; L Zhang; S Symons; R Aviv
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5.  Risks of microcatheter injections in acute stroke treatment.

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Review 6.  Use of perfusion imaging and other imaging techniques to assess risks/benefits of acute stroke interventions.

Authors:  Jason Tarpley; Dan Franc; Aaron P Tansy; David S Liebeskind
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7.  Acute carotid artery stenting in symptomatic high-grade cervical carotid artery stenosis.

Authors:  Kazuhide Adachi; Akiyo Sadato; Motoharu Hayakawa; Shingo Maeda; Yuichi Hirose
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8.  High-permeability region size on perfusion CT predicts hemorrhagic transformation after intravenous thrombolysis in stroke.

Authors:  Josep Puig; Gerard Blasco; Pepus Daunis-I-Estadella; Cecile van Eendendburg; María Carrillo-García; Carlos Aboud; María Hernández-Pérez; Joaquín Serena; Carles Biarnés; Kambiz Nael; David S Liebeskind; Götz Thomalla; Bijoy K Menon; Andrew Demchuk; Max Wintermark; Salvador Pedraza; Mar Castellanos
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2017-11-28       Impact factor: 3.240

  8 in total

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