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BOLD cerebrovascular reactivity MRI to identify tissue reperfusion failure after EVT in patients with LVO acute stroke

Authors :
Jacopo Bellomo
Martina Sebök
Vittorio Stumpo
Christiaan HB van Niftrik
Darja Meisterhans
Marco Piccirelli
Lars Michels
Beno Reolon
Tilman Schubert
Zsolt Kulcsar
Andreas R Luft
Susanne Wegener
Luca Regli
Jorn Fierstra
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2023.

Abstract

Background and purposeIn acute ischemic stroke due to large-vessel occlusion (LVO), the clinical outcome after endovascular thrombectomy (EVT) is influenced by the extent of autoregulatory hemodynamic impairment and collateral recruitment, which can be derived from blood oxygenation-level dependent cerebrovascular reactivity (BOLD-CVR). BOLD-CVR imaging identifies brain areas influenced by hemodynamic steal. We sought to investigate the presence of steal phenomenon and its relationship to DWI lesions and clinical deficit in the acute phase of ischemic stroke following successful vessel recanalization.MethodsFrom the prospective longitudinal IMPreST (Interplay of Microcirculation and Plasticity after ischemic Stroke) cohort study, patients with acute ischemic unilateral LVO stroke of the anterior circulation with successful endovascular thrombectomy (EVT; mTICI scale ≥ 2b) and subsequent BOLD-CVR examination were included for this analysis. We analyzed the spatial correlation between brain areas exhibiting BOLD-CVR associated steal phenomenon and DWI infarct lesion as well as the relationship between steal phenomenon and NIHSS score at hospital discharge.ResultsIncluded patients (n=21) exhibited steal phenomenon to different extents, whereas there was only a partial spatial overlap with the DWI lesion (median 18.51%; IQR, 8.44-59.09). The volume of steal phenomenon outside the DWI lesion showed a positive correlation with overall DWI lesion volume and was a significant predictor for the NIHSS score at hospital discharge.ConclusionsPatients with acute ischemic unilateral LVO stroke exhibited hemodynamic steal identified by BOLD-CVR after successful EVT. Steal volume was associated with DWI infarct lesion size and with poor clinical outcome at hospital discharge. BOLD-CVR may further aid in better understanding persisting hemodynamic impairment following reperfusion therapy.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........31ba9539c4e29f59dfc87fed0926f2bd