| Literature DB >> 26032925 |
Charlotte H P Cremers1,2, Pieter C Vos3, Irene C van der Schaaf4, Birgitta K Velthuis4, Mervyn D I Vergouwen5, Gabriel J E Rinkel5, Jan Willem Dankbaar4.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Delayed cerebral ischemia (DCI) after aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage (aSAH) can be reversible or progress to cerebral infarction. In patients with a deterioration clinically diagnosed as DCI, we investigated whether CT perfusion (CTP) can distinguish between reversible ischemia and ischemia progressing to cerebral infarction.Entities:
Keywords: CT perfusion; Delayed cerebral ischemia; Subarachnoid hemorrhage
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26032925 PMCID: PMC4572064 DOI: 10.1007/s00234-015-1543-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Neuroradiology ISSN: 0028-3940 Impact factor: 2.804
Fig. 1Standard ROIs in the cortical flow territories of the anterior cerebral artery, middle cerebral artery, and posterior cerebral artery and in the basal ganglia
Patient characteristics
| DCI with infarction ( | DCI without infarction ( | |
|---|---|---|
| Women (n, %) | 12 (71 %) | 14 (88 %) |
| Age (mean, range) | 52 (29–67) | 58 (28–81) |
| Admission WFNS score (%) | ||
| I | 7 (41 %) | 4 (25 %) |
| II | 5 (29 %) | 5 (31 %) |
| III | 2 (12 %) | 1 (6 %) |
| IV | 1 (6 %) | 4 (25 %) |
| V | 2 (12 %) | 2 (13 %) |
| Aneurysm location (%) | ||
| Acom, ACA | 8 (47 %) | 7 (44 %) |
| Pcom | 3 (18 %) | 5 (31 %) |
| BA | 3 (18 %) | 2 (13 %) |
| ICA | 3 (18 %) | 2 (13 %) |
| Treatment (%) | ||
| Coil | 10 (59 %) | 9 (56 %) |
| Clip | 6 (35 %) | 6 (38 %) |
| None | 0 (0 %) | 1 (6 %) |
| Both | 1 (6 %) | 0 (0 %) |
| Hypertension induction as treatment for DCI (%) | 5 (29 %) | 4 (25 %) |
| Perfusion deficit visible on CTP during clinical deterioration (%) | 15 (88 %) | 6 (38 %) |
| Clinical presentation at time of clinical deterioration (%) | ||
| WFNS score | ||
| I | 0 (0 %) | 0 (0 %) |
| II | 1 (6 %) | 1 (6 %) |
| III | 1 (6 %) | 1 (6 %) |
| IV | 6 (35 %) | 3 (19 %) |
| V | 2 (12 %) | 5 (31 %) |
| Focal deficit | 6 (35 %) | 5 (31 %) |
| Unknown | 1 (6 %) | 1 (6 %) |
| Mean CTP value (with SD) per patient (standard ROIs and perfusion deficits) | ||
| CBF (mL/100 g/min) | 25.29 (9.76) | 30.38 (12.43) |
| CBV (mL/100 g) | 2.79 (0.98) | 3.21 (1.15) |
| MTT (s) | 14.43 (1.97) | 13.88 (1.07) |
| TTP (s) | 14.20 (3.04) | 14.09 (2.09) |
DCI delayed cerebral ischemia, WFNS World Federation of Neurosurgeons, Acom anterior communicating artery, ACA anterior cerebral artery, Pcom posterior communicating artery, BA basilar artery, ICA internal carotid artery, CTP CT perfusion, SD standard deviation, ROIs regions of interest, CBF cerebral blood flow, CBV cerebral blood volume, MTT mean transit time, TTP time to peak
Lowest perfusion values
| CTP parameter | Infarction at follow-up ( | No infarction at follow-up ( |
|---|---|---|
| Absolute values (median (IQR)) | ||
| CBF (mL/100 g/min) | 11.66 (8.34–16.32) | 16.08 (8.92–23.57) |
| CBV (mL/100 g) | 1.66 (1.07–2.14) | 1.78 (1.23–2.44) |
| MTT (s) | 21.72 (16.76–26.54) | 18.83 (15.65–23.05) |
| TTP (s) | 19.18 (14.86–23.76) | 18.24 (16.29–21.94) |
| Relative values (median (IQR)) | ||
| CBF ratio | 0.53 (0.42–0.60) | 0.56 (0.36–0.62) |
| CBV ratio | 0.57 (0.53–0.65) | 0.59 (0.45–0.65) |
| MTT difference (s) | 7.62 (2.96–12.10) | 4.68 (2.29–9.44) |
| TTP difference (s) | 3.77 (2.16–8.92) | 4.46 (1.77–8.01) |
Lowest perfusion values: lowest value and ratio in CBF and CBV and highest value and difference in MTT and TTP, measured in standard ROIs in gray matter and basal ganglia or perfusion deficits (if applicable)
CTP CT perfusion, n number, IQR interquartile range (25–75 %), CBF cerebral blood flow, CBV cerebral blood volume, MTT mean transit time, TTP time to peak.