| Literature DB >> 24455270 |
Jawad Naqvi1, Kok Hooi Yap2, Gulraiz Ahmad3, Jonathan Ghosh1.
Abstract
Transcranial Doppler (TCD) is a noninvasive ultrasound (US) study used to measure cerebral blood flow velocity (CBF-V) in the major intracranial arteries. It involves use of low-frequency (≤2 MHz) US waves to insonate the basal cerebral arteries through relatively thin bone windows. TCD allows dynamic monitoring of CBF-V and vessel pulsatility, with a high temporal resolution. It is relatively inexpensive, repeatable, and portable. However, the performance of TCD is highly operator dependent and can be difficult, with approximately 10-20% of patients having inadequate transtemporal acoustic windows. Current applications of TCD include vasospasm in sickle cell disease, subarachnoid haemorrhage (SAH), and intra- and extracranial arterial stenosis and occlusion. TCD is also used in brain stem death, head injury, raised intracranial pressure (ICP), intraoperative monitoring, cerebral microembolism, and autoregulatory testing.Entities:
Year: 2013 PMID: 24455270 PMCID: PMC3876587 DOI: 10.1155/2013/629378
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Vasc Med ISSN: 2090-2824
Figure 1Right MCA TCD waveform (bottom) with colour Doppler (top).
Figure 2TCD headset and TCD handheld probe applied over the transtemporal window. Figure 2(b) is adapted from Nicoletto and Burkman [3]. Permission obtained. The copyright owner for the original image from which Figure 2(b) is adapted, is ASET (American Society of Electroneurodiagnostic Technologists), the Neurodiagnostic Society.
Insonation characteristics of the cerebral vasculature. Adapted from Nicoletto and Burkman [3]. Permission obtained; copyright owner ASET (American Society of Electroneurodiagnostic Technologists), the Neurodiagnostic Society.
| Artery | Acoustic window | Probe angle | Depth | Flow direction | Resistance | Adult MFV |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ECICA | Retromandibular | Superior-medial | 45–50 | Away | Low | 30 ± 9 |
| MCA | Middle transtemporal | Straight/Anterior-superior | 30–65 | Toward | Low | 55 ± 12 |
| ACA | Middle transtemporal | Straight/Anterior-superior | 60–75 | Away | Low | 50 ± 11 |
| PCA—segment 1 | Posterior transtemporal | Straight/Posterior | 60–70 | Toward | Low | 39 ± 10 |
| PCA—segment 2 | Posterior transtemporal | Straight/Posterior-superior | 60–70 | Away | Low | 40 ± 10 |
| BA | Suboccipital | Superior | 80–120 | Away | Low | 41 ± 10 |
| VA | Suboccipital | Superior lateral | 60–75 | Away | Low | 38 ± 10 |
| OA | Transorbital | Straight | 45–55 | Toward | High | 21 ± 5 |
| Supraclinoid ICA | Transorbital | Superior | 65–80 | Away | Low | 41 ± 11 |
| Parasellar ICA | Transorbital | Inferior | 65–80 | Toward | Low | 47 ± 14 |
(ECICA: extracranial internal carotid artery, MCA: middle cerebral artery, ACA: anterior cerebral artery, PCA: posterior cerebral artery, BA: basilar artery, OA: ophthalmic artery).
Factors influencing MFV [18, 20].
| Factor | Change in MFV |
|---|---|
| Age | Increases up to 6–10 years of age then decreases |
| Sex | Higher MFV in women than men |
| Pregnancy | Decreased in the 3rd trimester |
| PCO2 | Increases with increasing PCO2 |
| Mean arterial Pressure (MAP) | Increases with increasing MAP |
| Haematocrit | Increases with decreasing haemotocrit |
Grading of vasospasm severity [31, 32].
| Degree of MCA or ICA vasospasm | MFV (cm/s) | LR | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Mild (<25%) | 120–149 | A | 3–6 |
| Moderate (25–50%) | 150–199 | 3–6 | |
| Severe (>50%) | >200 | >6 | |
|
| |||
| Degree of BA vasospasm | MFV (cm/s) | Modified LR | |
|
| |||
| May represent vasospasm | 70–85 | A | 2–2.49 |
| Moderate (25–50%) | >85 | 2.5–2.99 | |
| Severe (>50%) | >85 | >3 | |
TCD applications [2, 4, 18, 39–41]. Categorised as per reference [39].
| Ischaemic cerebrovascular disease |
| Sickle cell disease |
| Right to left cardiac shunts |
| Intra and extra-cranial arterial steno-occlusive disease |
| Arteriovenous malformations and fistulas |
| Peri-procedural/operative |
| Cerebral thrombolysis in acute stroke |
| Carotid endarterectomy |
| Carotid angioplasty and stenting |
| Coronary artery bypass surgery |
| Coronary angioplasty |
| Prosthetic heart valves |
| Neurological/Neurosurgical intensive care |
| Vasospasm after subarachnoid haemorrhage |
| Raised intracranial pressure |
| Head injury |
| Cerebral circulatory arrest and brain death |
| Intracerebral aneurysm and parenchymal hematoma detection |
| Others |
| Pharmacologic vasomotor testing |
| Cerebral pressure autoregulation |
| Liver failure/Hepatic encephalopathy |
| Preeclampsia |
Figure 3A 70-year-old woman with SAH. TCD demonstrates an increased PSV and MFV in the right MCA, consistent with severe vasospasm.
Figure 4The TCD waveform in raised ICP or brain stem death. This oscillating MCA waveform demonstrates antegrade systolic flow with retrograde diastolic flow, consistent with raised ICP or brain stem death. Reproduced from Nicoletto and Burkman [26]. Permission obtained. Copyright owner ASET (American Society of Electroneurodiagnostic Technologists), the Neurodiagnostic Society.
Figure 5The TCD waveform in raised ICP or brain stem death. This MCA waveform demonstrates absent diastolic flow and small systolic spikes consistent with the late stages of raised ICP or brain stem death. Reproduced from Nicoletto and Burkman [26]. Permission obtained. Copyright owner ASET (American Society of Electroneurodiagnostic Technologists), the Neurodiagnostic Society.
Cardiopulmonary shunt grading based on microembolic signals [95, 97].
| Grade of shunt | Number of microembolic signals (MES) |
|---|---|
| No shunt | 0 |
| Low grade shunt | 1–10 |
| Medium grade shunt | 11–25 |
| High grade shunt | >25 (shower) or uncountable (curtain effect) |