| Literature DB >> 28138001 |
Kambiz Nael1, James R Knitter2, Reza Jahan2, Jeffery Gornbein2, Zahra Ajani2, Lei Feng2, Brett C Meyer2, Lee H Schwamm2, Albert J Yoo2, Randolph S Marshall2, Philip M Meyers2, Dileep R Yavagal2, Max Wintermark2, David S Liebeskind2, Judy Guzy2, Sidney Starkman2, Jeffrey L Saver2, Chelsea S Kidwell2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND ANDEntities:
Keywords: biomarkers; embolectomy; hemorrhage; permeability; stroke
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28138001 PMCID: PMC5325250 DOI: 10.1161/STROKEAHA.116.014343
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Stroke ISSN: 0039-2499 Impact factor: 7.914
Figure 1.A 45-y-old man presented with left sided weakness and baseline National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale score of 19. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) was obtained 5.5 hours from symptoms’ onset presentation. Axial apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC; A), cerebral blood volume (CBV; B), and microvascular permeability (K2; C) from the pretreatment MRI are shown. Volume of interest (VOI) from the diffusion-weighted image hyperintense region was automatically generated, and after image coregistration, voxel values from VOI were used to calculate 10th percentile ADC (384×10−6 mm2/s), 10th percentile CBV (0.40), and 90th percentile K2 (0.32). Subsequent MRI 8 d later shows development of parenchymal hemorrhage in the region of infarction (D).
Baseline and Clinical Data in Patients With and Without PH
Imaging Data in Patients With and Without PH*
Figure 2.Scatter plots for 10th percentile cerebral blood volume (CBV), 10th percentile apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC), and 90th percentile microvascular permeability (K2). There are moderate negative correlations between 90th percentile K2 with 10th percentile CBV and 10th percentile ADC and a moderate positive correlation between 10th percentile CBV and 10th percentile ADC.
Optimal Threshold, Sensitivity, Specificity, and Overall Accuracy for 10th Percentile CBV, 10th Percentile ADC, and 90th Percentile K2*
Figure 3.Classification tree model using combined 10th percentile cerebral blood volume (CBV) and 90th percentile microvascular permeability (K2). If 10th percentile CBV ≥0.47 and 90th percentile K2 <0.28, the model predicts no parenchymal hemorrhage (PH) in 55 out of 63 patients. If 10th percentile CBV <0.47 and 90th percentile K2 ≥0.28, the model predicts PH in 18 out of 20 patients.