| Literature DB >> 29383984 |
Shinpei Sato1, Daigo Kojima1,2, Yasuyoshi Shimada1,2, Jun Yoshida1,2, Kentaro Fujimato1, Shunrou Fujiwara1, Masakazu Kobayashi1,2, Yoshitaka Kubo1, Kenji Yoshida1, Kazunori Terasaki2, Shouta Tsutsui1, Kenya Miyoshi1, Kuniaki Ogasawara1,2.
Abstract
The present study examined whether preoperatively reduced cerebrovascular contractile reactivity to hypocapnia by hyperventilation is associated with development of cerebral hyperperfusion syndrome after arterial bypass surgery for adult patients with cerebral misery perfusion due to ischemic moyamoya disease. Among 65 adult patients with ischemic moyamoya disease, 19 had misery perfusion in the precentral region on preoperative 15O positron emission tomography and underwent arterial bypass surgery for that region. Brain technetium-99 m-labeled ethyl cysteinate dimer single-photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) was preoperatively performed with and without hyperventilation challenge and relative cerebrovascular contractile reactivity to hypocapnia (RCVCRhypocap) (%/mmHg) was calculated in the precentral region. Development of cerebral hyperperfusion syndrome was determined using perioperative changes of symptoms and brain N-isopropyl-p-[123I]-iodoamphetamine SPECT performed after surgery. RCVCRhypocap was significantly lower in the 6 patients with cerebral hyperperfusion syndrome (-2.85 ± 1.10%/mmHg) than in the 13 patients without cerebral hyperperfusion syndrome (0.18 ± 1.97%/mmHg; p = 0.0050). Multivariate analysis demonstrated low RCVCRhypocap as an independent predictor of cerebral hyperperfusion syndrome (95% confidence interval, 0.04-0.96; p = 0.0433). Preoperatively reduced cerebrovascular contractile reactivity to hypocapnia by hyperventilation is associated with development of cerebral hyperperfusion syndrome after arterial bypass surgery for adult patients with cerebral misery perfusion due to ischemic moyamoya disease.Entities:
Keywords: Moyamoya disease; hyperperfusion syndrome; hypocapnia; misery perfusion; single-photon emission computed tomography
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29383984 PMCID: PMC5999000 DOI: 10.1177/0271678X18757621
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Cereb Blood Flow Metab ISSN: 0271-678X Impact factor: 6.200