Literature DB >> 26564435

Acute Preoperative Infarcts and Poor Cerebrovascular Reserve Are Independent Risk Factors for Severe Ischemic Complications following Direct Extracranial-Intracranial Bypass for Moyamoya Disease.

Michael U Antonucci1, Terrence C Burns2, T Michael Pulling3, Jarrett Rosenberg3, Michael P Marks3, Gary K Steinberg2, Greg Zaharchuk3.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND AND
PURPOSE: Severe ischemic changes are a rare but devastating complication following direct superficial temporal artery to MCA bypass in patients with Moyamoya disease. This study was undertaken to determine whether preoperative MR imaging and/or cerebrovascular reserve assessment by using reference standard stable xenon-enhanced CT could predict such complications.
MATERIALS AND METHODS: Among all adult patients undergoing direct bypass at our institution between 2005 and 2010 who received a clinically interpretable xenon-enhanced CT examination, we identified index cases (patients with >15-mL postoperative infarcts) and control cases (patients without postoperative infarcts and without transient or permanent ischemic symptoms). Differences between groups were evaluated by using the Mann-Whitney U test. Univariate and multivariate generalized linear model regression was used to test predictors of postoperative infarct.
RESULTS: Six index cases were identified and compared with 25 controls. Infarct size in the index cases was 95 ± 55 mL. Four of 6 index cases (67%), but no control patients, had preoperative acute infarcts. Baseline CBF was similar, but cerebrovascular reserve was significantly lower in the index cases compared with control cases. For example, in the anterior circulation, median cerebrovascular reserve was -0.4% (range, -38.0%-16.6%) in index versus 26.3% (range, -8.2%-60.5%) in control patients (P = .003). Multivariate analysis demonstrated that the presence of a small preoperative infarct (regardless of location) and impaired cerebrovascular reserve were independent, significant predictors of severe postoperative ischemic injury.
CONCLUSIONS: Acute infarcts and impaired cerebrovascular reserve on preoperative imaging are independent risk factors for severe ischemic complications following superficial temporal artery to MCA bypass in Moyamoya disease.
© 2016 by American Journal of Neuroradiology.

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Year:  2015        PMID: 26564435      PMCID: PMC4752884          DOI: 10.3174/ajnr.A4535

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  AJNR Am J Neuroradiol        ISSN: 0195-6108            Impact factor:   3.825


  24 in total

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2.  Cerebral hemodynamics in Moyamoya disease: correlation between perfusion-weighted MR imaging and cerebral angiography.

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3.  Intraoperative blood flow analysis of direct revascularization procedures in patients with moyamoya disease.

Authors:  Marco Lee; Raphael Guzman; Teresa Bell-Stephens; Gary K Steinberg
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Authors:  Seung-Jae Hyun; Jong-Soo Kim; Seung-Chyul Hong
Journal:  Acta Neurochir (Wien)       Date:  2010-04-07       Impact factor: 2.216

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7.  Improving dynamic susceptibility contrast MRI measurement of quantitative cerebral blood flow using corrections for partial volume and nonlinear contrast relaxivity: A xenon computed tomographic comparative study.

Authors:  Greg Zaharchuk; Roland Bammer; Matus Straka; Rexford D Newbould; Jarrett Rosenberg; Jean-Marc Olivot; Michael Mlynash; Maarten G Lansberg; Neil E Schwartz; Michael M Marks; Gregory W Albers; Michael E Moseley
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Review 4.  Progress on Complications of Direct Bypass for Moyamoya Disease.

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5.  Clinical efficacy of extracranial-intracranial bypass for the treatment of adult patients with moyamoya disease: A protocol of systematic review of randomized controlled trials.

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Review 7.  Characteristics of Moyamoya Disease in the Older Population: Is It Possible to Define a Typical Presentation and Optimal Therapeutical Management?

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