| Literature DB >> 26952017 |
M Pham1, M Bendszus2.
Abstract
Several randomized-controlled trials could recently demonstrate that ischemic stroke which is caused by large-cerebral-artery-occlusion can be treated effectively by endovascular recanalization. Among these studies, particularly the data from the ESCAPE study further corroborated the strong association between macrovascular pial collateral flow (before recanalization) and clinical outcome after recanalization. This review briefly gives an overview on these data and on the clinical key observations demonstrating this association in practice. Since the ischemic penumbra can only be sustained by collateral flow, the collapse of collateral blood flow or poor collateral filling, observed for example by DSA or CTA before recanalization, seems to be a primary cause of rapidly progressive infarction and futile therapeutic recanalization. However, it needs to be emphasized that the true cause-effect relationship between collateral failure and rapidly progressive infarction of the penumbra, i.e. the high probability of unfavorable clinical outcome despite recanalization, remains unclear. Along this line, an alternative hypothesis is offered viewing the collapse of collateral flow not as a cause but possibly as an inevitable secondary consequence of increasing peripheral/microvascular resistance during progressive infarction.Entities:
Keywords: acute therapy; collaterals; endovascular recanalization; ischemic stroke; macrovascular; microvascular
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26952017 PMCID: PMC4914521 DOI: 10.1007/s00062-016-0507-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Neuroradiol ISSN: 1869-1439 Impact factor: 3.649
Fig. 1Strong association between collateral status at baseline and outcome. Upper row from left to right: Baseline frontal digital subtraction angiography (DSA) projection in arterial, parenchymal and early venous phase shows poor filling of the macrovascular pial arterial tree in right M1 occlusion. Despite successful recanalization (thrombolysis in cerebral infarction (TICI) 2b, not shown) unfavorable outcome with complete middle cerebral artery (MCA) infarction and hemorrhagic transformation ensued necessitating decompression hemicraniectomy (cranial computed tomography (CCT) on upper right). Middle row: Strong filling of pial collaterals at baseline in in right M1 occlusion. After successful recanalization (TICI 2b, not shown) favorable outcome was observed with only limited striatal infarction conspicuous by mild contrast extravasation. Lower row: Strong filling of pial collaterals at baseline in right internal carotid artery (ICA) occlusion (contralateral/left ICA injected). Even though recanalization could not be achieved in this case, neither by transfemoral access nor by direct carotid puncture, outcome was still favorable with only limited striatal infarction on follow-up CCT conspicuous by hypoattenuation (CCT on lower right)
Fig. 2Macrovascular pial anastomosis between neighboring territories visualized by digital subtraction angiography (one exemplary perirolandic anastomosis between anterior cerebral artery (ACA) and middle cerebral artery (MCA) territory). Upper left: Left-sided occlusion of M1 segment (left internal carotid artery (ICA) Injection). The opacification in the arterial phase shows complete filling of ACA territory with far-reaching leptomeningeal terminal branches of the ACA arching over the brain convexity and backfilling terminal M4 segments of the ischemic MCA field. Lower left (zoomed): The terminal ACA segment fills in antegrade fashion (green dots and green arrow), whereas the terminal M4 segment (red dots and red arrow) is filled in retrograde direction (from medial to lateral). Upper right: After complete endovascular recanalization of this left M1 occlusion, opacification in the late arterial phase shows a complete filling of ACA and MCA territories each in antegrade fashion, leaving the typical, physiological borderzone of perfusion between these territories. Lower right (zoomed): The same terminal segments of the ACA (green dots, green arrow) and the MCA (red dots, red arrow now indicating reversal of flow from lateral to medial) are shown as before recanalization (lower left). Now, after recanalization, the terminal M4 segment fills in the reverse, physiological direction (from lateral to medial), which is indicated by the reversed red arrow