Literature DB >> 28933655

Cerebrovascular reactivity measurement in cerebral small vessel disease: Rationale and reproducibility of a protocol for MRI acquisition and image processing.

Michael J Thrippleton1,2, Yulu Shi1,2, Gordon Blair1,2, Iona Hamilton1,2, Gordon Waiter3, Christian Schwarzbauer4, Cyril Pernet1,2, Peter Jd Andrews2, Ian Marshall1,2, Fergus Doubal1,2, Joanna M Wardlaw1,2,5.   

Abstract

Background Impaired autoregulation may contribute to the pathogenesis of cerebral small vessel disease. Reliable protocols for measuring microvascular reactivity are required to test this hypothesis and for providing secondary endpoints in clinical trials. Aims To develop and assess a protocol for acquisition and processing of cerebrovascular reactivity by MRI, in subcortical tissue of patients with small vessel disease and minor stroke. Methods We recruited 15 healthy volunteers, testing paradigms using 1- and 3-min 6% CO2 challenges with repeat scanning, and 15 patients with history of minor stroke. We developed a protocol to measure cerebrovascular reactivity and delay times, assessing tolerability and reproducibility in grey and white matter areas. Results The 3-min paradigm yielded more reproducible data than the 1-min paradigm (CV respectively: 7.9-15.4% and 11.7-70.2% for cerebrovascular reactivity in grey matter), and was less reproducible in white matter (16.1-24.4% and 27.5-141.0%). Tolerability was similar for the two paradigms, but mean cerebrovascular reactivity and cerebrovascular reactivity delay were significantly higher for the 3-min paradigm in most regions. Patient tolerability was high with no evidence of greater failure rate (1/15 patients vs. 2/15 volunteers withdrew at the first visit). Grey matter cerebrovascular reactivity was lower in patients than in volunteers (0.110-0.234 vs. 0.172-0.313%/mmHg; p < 0.05 in 6/8 regions), as was the white matter cerebrovascular reactivity delay (16.2-43.9 vs. 31.1-47.9 s; p < 0.05 in 4/8 regions). Conclusions An effective and well-tolerated protocol for measurement of cerebrovascular reactivity was developed for use in ongoing and future trials to investigate small vessel disease pathophysiology and to measure treatment effects.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Cerebrovascular reactivity; cerebral small vessel disease; magnetic resonance imaging; stroke

Mesh:

Year:  2017        PMID: 28933655     DOI: 10.1177/1747493017730740

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Int J Stroke        ISSN: 1747-4930            Impact factor:   5.266


  15 in total

1.  Autoregulation of White Matter Cerebral Blood Flow to Arterial Pressure Changes in Normal Subjects.

Authors:  William Powers; Hongyu An; Jonathan Oakes; Joseph Eron; Kevin Robertson; Souvik Sen
Journal:  J Neurol Disord Stroke       Date:  2021-12-14

2.  Reproducibility of cerebrovascular reactivity measurements: A systematic review of neuroimaging techniques.

Authors:  Moss Y Zhao; Amanda Woodward; Audrey P Fan; Kevin T Chen; Yannan Yu; David Y Chen; Michael E Moseley; Greg Zaharchuk
Journal:  J Cereb Blood Flow Metab       Date:  2021-11-22       Impact factor: 6.960

3.  Small vessel disease is associated with altered cerebrovascular pulsatility but not resting cerebral blood flow.

Authors:  Yulu Shi; Michael J Thrippleton; Gordon W Blair; David A Dickie; Ian Marshall; Iona Hamilton; Fergus N Doubal; Francesca Chappell; Joanna M Wardlaw
Journal:  J Cereb Blood Flow Metab       Date:  2018-10-08       Impact factor: 6.200

4.  Study Protocol: The Heart and Brain Study.

Authors:  Sana Suri; Daniel Bulte; Scott T Chiesa; Klaus P Ebmeier; Peter Jezzard; Sebastian W Rieger; Jemma E Pitt; Ludovica Griffanti; Thomas W Okell; Martin Craig; Michael A Chappell; Nicholas P Blockley; Mika Kivimäki; Archana Singh-Manoux; Ashraf W Khir; Alun D Hughes; John E Deanfield; Daria E A Jensen; Sebastian F Green; Veronika Sigutova; Michelle G Jansen; Enikő Zsoldos; Clare E Mackay
Journal:  Front Physiol       Date:  2021-03-31       Impact factor: 4.566

5.  Rationale and design of a longitudinal study of cerebral small vessel diseases, clinical and imaging outcomes in patients presenting with mild ischaemic stroke: Mild Stroke Study 3.

Authors:  Una Clancy; Daniela Jaime Garcia; Michael S Stringer; Michael J Thrippleton; Maria C Valdés-Hernández; Stewart Wiseman; Olivia Kl Hamilton; Francesca M Chappell; Rosalind Brown; Gordon W Blair; Will Hewins; Emilie Sleight; Lucia Ballerini; Mark E Bastin; Susana Munoz Maniega; Tom MacGillivray; Kirstie Hetherington; Charlene Hamid; Carmen Arteaga; Alasdair G Morgan; Cameron Manning; Ellen Backhouse; Iona Hamilton; Dominic Job; Ian Marshall; Fergus N Doubal; Joanna M Wardlaw
Journal:  Eur Stroke J       Date:  2020-06-05

6.  MRI Relaxometry for Quantitative Analysis of USPIO Uptake in Cerebral Small Vessel Disease.

Authors:  Michael J Thrippleton; Gordon W Blair; Maria C Valdes-Hernandez; Andreas Glatz; Scott I K Semple; Fergus Doubal; Alex Vesey; Ian Marshall; David E Newby; Joanna M Wardlaw
Journal:  Int J Mol Sci       Date:  2019-02-12       Impact factor: 5.923

7.  Tolerability, safety and intermediary pharmacological effects of cilostazol and isosorbide mononitrate, alone and combined, in patients with lacunar ischaemic stroke: The LACunar Intervention-1 (LACI-1) trial, a randomised clinical trial.

Authors:  Gordon W Blair; Jason P Appleton; Katie Flaherty; Fergus Doubal; Nikola Sprigg; Richard Dooley; Carla Richardson; Iona Hamilton; Zhe Kang Law; Yulu Shi; Michael S Stringer; Michael J Thrippleton; Julia Boyd; Kirsten Shuler; Philip M Bath; Joanna M Wardlaw
Journal:  EClinicalMedicine       Date:  2019-04-24

Review 8.  William M. Feinberg Award for Excellence in Clinical Stroke: Small Vessel Disease; a Big Problem, But Fixable.

Authors:  Joanna M Wardlaw
Journal:  Stroke       Date:  2018-06-12       Impact factor: 7.914

9.  A Comparison of CVR Magnitude and Delay Assessed at 1.5 and 3T in Patients With Cerebral Small Vessel Disease.

Authors:  Michael S Stringer; Gordon W Blair; Yulu Shi; Iona Hamilton; David A Dickie; Fergus N Doubal; Ian M Marshall; Michael J Thrippleton; Joanna M Wardlaw
Journal:  Front Physiol       Date:  2021-06-02       Impact factor: 4.755

Review 10.  Harmonizing brain magnetic resonance imaging methods for vascular contributions to neurodegeneration.

Authors:  Eric E Smith; Geert Jan Biessels; François De Guio; Frank Erik de Leeuw; Simon Duchesne; Marco Düring; Richard Frayne; M Arfan Ikram; Eric Jouvent; Bradley J MacIntosh; Michael J Thrippleton; Meike W Vernooij; Hieab Adams; Walter H Backes; Lucia Ballerini; Sandra E Black; Christopher Chen; Rod Corriveau; Charles DeCarli; Steven M Greenberg; M Edip Gurol; Michael Ingrisch; Dominic Job; Bonnie Y K Lam; Lenore J Launer; Jennifer Linn; Cheryl R McCreary; Vincent C T Mok; Leonardo Pantoni; G Bruce Pike; Joel Ramirez; Yael D Reijmer; Jose Rafael Romero; Stefan Ropele; Natalia S Rost; Perminder S Sachdev; Christopher J M Scott; Sudha Seshadri; Mukul Sharma; Steven Sourbron; Rebecca M E Steketee; Richard H Swartz; Robert van Oostenbrugge; Matthias van Osch; Sanneke van Rooden; Anand Viswanathan; David Werring; Martin Dichgans; Joanna M Wardlaw
Journal:  Alzheimers Dement (Amst)       Date:  2019-02-26
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