N M Ramadan1, S R Levine, K M Welch. 1. Department of Neurology, Henry Ford Hospital and Health Sciences Center, Detroit, MI 48202-2689.
Abstract
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Transient neurological symptoms of brain stem or occipital lobe origin may be caused by transient ischemic attack in the vertebrobasilar territory (VB-TIA) or late-onset (or late-life) migraine accompaniment (LOMA). It is often clinically difficult to distinguish between VB-TIA and LOMA. METHODS: Cerebral blood flow of 23 patients with VB-TIA, 24 with LOMA, and 28 age-matched control subjects was measured using the 133Xe inhalation regional cerebral blood flow (rCBF) technique. RESULTS: After adjusting for differences in baseline variables such as blood pressure, hematocrit, and PCO2, patients with VB-TIA had (1) lower mean rCBF than control subjects (P < .003) as measured by the initial slope index method; (2) more frequent anterior rCBF asymmetries than control subjects and patients with LOMA (P < .03 for both comparisons); and (3) higher mean interhemispheric rCBF differences compared with patients with LOMA (P = .08) and control subjects (P < .02). CONCLUSIONS: Regional CBF patterns in patients with VB-TIA and LOMA differ, with lower rCBF and more asymmetry of the anterior blood flows in patients with VB-TIA, probably reflecting the effects of stroke risk factors on the cerebral circulation. Patients with LOMA have rCBF patterns more closely resembling those of age-matched healthy subjects. rCBF measurements may assist in the clinical diagnosis of VB-TIA and late-onset migrainous events.
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Transient neurological symptoms of brain stem or occipital lobe origin may be caused by transient ischemic attack in the vertebrobasilar territory (VB-TIA) or late-onset (or late-life) migraine accompaniment (LOMA). It is often clinically difficult to distinguish between VB-TIA and LOMA. METHODS: Cerebral blood flow of 23 patients with VB-TIA, 24 with LOMA, and 28 age-matched control subjects was measured using the 133Xe inhalation regional cerebral blood flow (rCBF) technique. RESULTS: After adjusting for differences in baseline variables such as blood pressure, hematocrit, and PCO2, patients with VB-TIA had (1) lower mean rCBF than control subjects (P < .003) as measured by the initial slope index method; (2) more frequent anterior rCBF asymmetries than control subjects and patients with LOMA (P < .03 for both comparisons); and (3) higher mean interhemispheric rCBF differences compared with patients with LOMA (P = .08) and control subjects (P < .02). CONCLUSIONS: Regional CBF patterns in patients with VB-TIA and LOMA differ, with lower rCBF and more asymmetry of the anterior blood flows in patients with VB-TIA, probably reflecting the effects of stroke risk factors on the cerebral circulation. Patients with LOMA have rCBF patterns more closely resembling those of age-matched healthy subjects. rCBF measurements may assist in the clinical diagnosis of VB-TIA and late-onset migrainous events.