| Literature DB >> 31952980 |
Kokoro Kawamura1, Miki Fujimura2, Ryosuke Tashiro3, Atsushi Kanoke4, Atsushi Saito4, Teiji Tominaga3.
Abstract
We report an adult moyamoya disease (MMD) patient who developed persistent local vasogenic edema with dynamic change in the regional cerebral blood flow after left superficial temporal artery-middle cerebral artery (STA-MCA) anastomosis. A 49-year-old woman with ischemic-onset MMD underwent left STA-MCA anastomosis. Magnetic resonance (MR) imaging of fluid-attenuated inversion recovery 1 day after surgery revealed an asymptomatic local high-signal-intensity lesion at the site of anastomosis, and MR angiography demonstrated apparently patent STA-MCA bypass. Due to the increased apparent diffusion coefficient value, we diagnosed the lesion as vasogenic edema. A significant increase in focal cerebral blood flow (CBF) at the site of the anastomosis was observed on N-isopropyl-p-[123I] iodoamphetamine single-photon emission computed tomography (123I-IMP-SPECT) (139.8%; compared with the preoperative value). Under strict blood pressure control (systolic blood pressure under 130 mmHg), the patient remained asymptomatic during the entire peri-operative period, but the 123I-IMP-SPECT 7 days after surgery suggested paradoxical CBF decrease (72.9%). Based on this finding, we allow the patient to be maintained under normotensive condition (∼160 mmHg), which recovered the CBF (115.0%) 14 days after surgery. Vasogenic edema remained during the entire peri-operative period, but completely disappeared 83 days after surgery. Local vasogenic edema formation due to cerebral hyperperfusion is not uncommon after STA-MCA anastomosis for adult MMD, but dynamic CBF change at the site of persistent local vasogenic edema after STA-MCA anastomosis is extremely rare. We recommend serial CBF measurement in the acute stage after revascularization surgery for MMD, especially when MR imaging demonstrates local signal intensity change.Entities:
Keywords: Moyamoya disease; exreacranial-intracranial bypass; hyperperfusion; hypoperfusion; vasogenic edema
Year: 2020 PMID: 31952980 DOI: 10.1016/j.jstrokecerebrovasdis.2019.104625
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Stroke Cerebrovasc Dis ISSN: 1052-3057 Impact factor: 2.136