| Literature DB >> 30571423 |
Maxime Gauberti1,2, Bertrand Lapergue3, Sara Martinez de Lizarrondo1, Denis Vivien1,4, Sébastien Richard5, Serge Bracard6,7, Michel Piotin8, Benjamin Gory6,7.
Abstract
Background and Purpose- In experimental models of ischemic stroke, abrupt reperfusion is associated with secondary brain damages, responsible for up to 70% of the final lesion size. Whether this remains true in humans is unknown. Methods- Using data from the ASTER randomized trial (Aspiration vs Stent Retriever for Successful Revascularization), we investigated the effect of complete reperfusion (defined as a modified Thrombolysis In Cerebral Infarction 3) after endovascular thrombectomy on early lesion growth as assessed by diffusion-weighted imaging at baseline and 1 day after reperfusion. Results- Among 381 patients included in the trial, 35 achieved complete reperfusion, benefited from both baseline and day 1 diffusion-weighted imaging, lacked significant hemorrhagic transformation, and were, therefore, included in the present study. We found that the median growth of the ischemic lesion between baseline and day 1 was only 0.9 mL after complete reperfusion, representing <4% of the mean lesion size. The actual lesion growth occurring after reperfusion is probably even smaller because this lesion growth occurred, at least in part, between baseline imaging and complete reperfusion, as demonstrated by a statistically significant positive correlation between imaging-to-reperfusion time and lesion growth ( R2=0.116; P=0.048). Conclusions- There is no significant lesion growth after complete reperfusion in most patients. This important discrepancy between clinical and preclinical pathophysiologies should be considered during preclinical evaluation of neuroprotective strategies.Entities:
Keywords: brain; cerebral infarction; reperfusion; stroke; thrombectomy
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30571423 DOI: 10.1161/STROKEAHA.118.022015
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Stroke ISSN: 0039-2499 Impact factor: 7.914