TY - JOUR
T1 - Cerebral blood flow quantification with multi-delay arterial spin labeling in ischemic stroke and the association with early neurological outcome
AU - Luijten, Sven P.R.
AU - Bos, Daniel
AU - van Doormaal, Pieter Jan
AU - Goyal, Mayank
AU - Dijkhuizen, Rick M.
AU - Dippel, Diederik W.J.
AU - Roozenbeek, Bob
AU - van der Lugt, Aad
AU - Warnert, Esther A.H.
N1 - Funding Information:
We would like to thank the CONTRAST (collaboration for new treatments of acute stroke) Clinical Trial Collaborators. A full list of members of the CONTRAST collaborators can be found on https://www.contrast-consortium.nl/.
Funding Information:
This work is funded in part through the Collaboration for New Treatments of Acute Stroke (CONTRAST) consortium, which acknowledges the support from the Netherlands Cardiovascular Research Initiative, an initiative of the Dutch Heart Foundation (CVON2015-01: CONTRAST); and from the Brain Foundation Netherlands (HA2015.01.06). The collaboration project is additionally financed by the Ministry of Economic Affairs by means of the PPP Allowance made available by Top Sector Life Sciences & Health to stimulate public–private partnerships (LSHM17016). This work was further funded in part through unrestricted funding by Stryker, Medtronic, and Cerenovus. EW is funded by a “Veni Vernieuwingsimpuls” from the Dutch Research Council entitled “Food for thought: Oxygen delivery to the brain”, Grant No 91619121.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2023 Erasmus MC University Medical Center
PY - 2023
Y1 - 2023
N2 - Restoring blood flow to brain tissue at risk of infarction is essential for tissue survival and clinical outcome. We used cerebral blood flow (CBF) quantified with multiple post-labeling delay (PLD) pseudocontinuous arterial spin labeling (ASL) MRI after ischemic stroke and assessed the association between CBF and early neurological outcome. We acquired ASL with 7 PLDs at 3.0 T in large vessel occlusion stroke patients at 24 h. We quantified CBF relative to the contralateral hemisphere (rCBF) and defined hyperperfusion as a ≥30% increase and hypoperfusion as a ≥40% decrease in rCBF. We included 44 patients (median age: 70 years, median NIHSS: 13, 40 treated with endovascular thrombectomy) of whom 37 were recanalized. Hyperperfusion in ischemic core occurred in recanalized but not in non-recanalized patients (65.8% vs 0%, p = 0.006). Hypoperfusion occurred only in the latter group (0% vs 85.7%, p < 0.001). In recanalized patients, hyperperfusion was also seen in salvaged penumbra (38.9%). Higher rCBF in ischemic core (aβ, −2.75 [95% CI: −4.11 to −1.40]) and salvaged penumbra (aβ, −5.62 [95% CI: −9.57 to −1.68]) was associated with lower NIHSS scores at 24 h. In conclusion, hyperperfusion frequently occurs in infarcted and salvaged brain tissue following successful recanalization and early neurological outcome is positively associated with the level of reperfusion.
AB - Restoring blood flow to brain tissue at risk of infarction is essential for tissue survival and clinical outcome. We used cerebral blood flow (CBF) quantified with multiple post-labeling delay (PLD) pseudocontinuous arterial spin labeling (ASL) MRI after ischemic stroke and assessed the association between CBF and early neurological outcome. We acquired ASL with 7 PLDs at 3.0 T in large vessel occlusion stroke patients at 24 h. We quantified CBF relative to the contralateral hemisphere (rCBF) and defined hyperperfusion as a ≥30% increase and hypoperfusion as a ≥40% decrease in rCBF. We included 44 patients (median age: 70 years, median NIHSS: 13, 40 treated with endovascular thrombectomy) of whom 37 were recanalized. Hyperperfusion in ischemic core occurred in recanalized but not in non-recanalized patients (65.8% vs 0%, p = 0.006). Hypoperfusion occurred only in the latter group (0% vs 85.7%, p < 0.001). In recanalized patients, hyperperfusion was also seen in salvaged penumbra (38.9%). Higher rCBF in ischemic core (aβ, −2.75 [95% CI: −4.11 to −1.40]) and salvaged penumbra (aβ, −5.62 [95% CI: −9.57 to −1.68]) was associated with lower NIHSS scores at 24 h. In conclusion, hyperperfusion frequently occurs in infarcted and salvaged brain tissue following successful recanalization and early neurological outcome is positively associated with the level of reperfusion.
KW - Arterial spin labeling
KW - Cerebral blood flow
KW - Hyperperfusion
KW - Ischemic stroke
KW - Large vessel occlusion
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85147452818&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.nicl.2023.103340
DO - 10.1016/j.nicl.2023.103340
M3 - Article
C2 - 36739791
AN - SCOPUS:85147452818
SN - 2213-1582
VL - 37
SP - 1
EP - 8
JO - NeuroImage: Clinical
JF - NeuroImage: Clinical
M1 - 103340
ER -