| Literature DB >> 27242938 |
Yi Zhang1, Abhay Kumar1, John B Tezel2, Yihua Zhou2.
Abstract
Background. Cerebral hyperperfusion syndrome (CHS), a rare complication after cerebral revascularization, is a well-described phenomenon after carotid endarterectomy or carotid artery stenting. However, the imaging evidence of CHS after intravenous tissue plasminogen activator (iv tPA) for acute ischemic stroke (AIS) has not been reported. Case Report. Four patients were determined to have manifestations of CHS with clinical deterioration after treatment with iv tPA, including one patient who developed seizure, one patient who had a deviation of the eyes toward lesion with worsened mental status, and two patients who developed worsened hemiparesis. In all four patients, postthrombolysis head CT examinations were negative for hemorrhage; CT angiogram showed patent cervical and intracranial arterial vasculature; CT perfusion imaging revealed hyperperfusion with increased relative cerebral blood flow and relative cerebral blood volume and decreased mean transit time along with decreased time to peak in the clinically related artery territory. Vascular dilation was also noted in three of these four cases. Conclusions. CHS should be considered in patients with clinical deterioration after iv tPA and imaging negative for hemorrhage. Cerebral angiogram and perfusion studies can be useful in diagnosing CHS thereby helping with further management.Entities:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27242938 PMCID: PMC4868889 DOI: 10.1155/2016/8725494
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Case Rep Neurol Med ISSN: 2090-6676
Four cases of cerebral hyperperfusion syndrome after intravenous tPA for acute ischemic stroke.
| Age | Sex | Stroke symptoms | PMH | NIHSS (onset) | tPA dose | CHS symptoms | NIHSS (D/C) | Infarct area | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Case 1 | 61 | M | Aphasia, right hemiplegia | CLL | 9 | 90 mg | Seizure | 2 | Cortical |
| Case 2 | 82 | M | Dysarthria, right hemiplegia | Prostate cancer. HTN, Afib | 9 | 70 mg | Worsening hemiplegia | 7 | Basal ganglia |
| Case 3 | 92 | M | Aphasia, right hemiplegia, confusion | Colon cancer, Afib | 23 | 74 mg | Worsening hemiplegia | Deceased | Cortical |
| Case 4 | 65 | F | Aphasia, right hemiplegia | HTN, DVT, colitis | 20 | 90 mg | Eyes deviation, confusion | 10 | Cortical |
PMH: past medical history; NIHSS: NIH stroke scale; CHS: cerebral hyperperfusion syndrome; D/C: at discharge time; M: male; F: female; CLL: chronic lymphocytic leukemia; HTN: hypertension; Afib: atrial fibrillation; DVT: deep vein thrombosis.
Figure 1Hyperperfusion on computed tomography perfusion and the dilation of the left middle cerebral artery and its branches on CT angiogram after iv tPA treatment: (a) increased cerebral blood volume; (b) shortened time to peak; (c) increased cerebral blood flow; (d) shortened mean transit time.
Figure 2Hyperdense middle cerebral artery on the initial CT prior to intravenous tissue plasminogen activator (a). Diffusion-weighted magnetic resonance imaging (b). Apparent diffusion coefficient (c) confirms acute infarction in the left MCA territory.