Abstract

Introduction: The etiology of diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI) lesions in patients after minimally invasive surgery (MIS) for acute intracerebral hemorrhage (ICH) remains unclear. Methods: Postoperative brain MRIs of patients with spontaneous ICH from 2016-2021 who underwent imaging within one month of MIS were reviewed. DWI lesions were quantified. Lesions within 10 mm of the hematoma were excluded. Siderosis and microbleeds were identified. Leukoaraiosis was quantified using the Fazekas score. Univariate analyses were conducted to determine predictors of DWI lesion burden, and variables with P≤0.1 were included in multivariate analyses. Results: DWI lesions were present in 84 (49%) postoperative MRIs. The average number of DWI lesions was 2.11 (range 0-74, SD 6.50). Factors associated with DWI burden in univariate analyses included increased presenting systolic blood pressure (SBP) (P=0.003), Fazekas score (P=0.004), delta SBP on day of admission (P=0.034), preoperative angiogram (P=0.062), microbleeds on MRI (P=0.065), increased presenting National Institutes of Health Stroke Score (P=0.066), presence of intraventricular hemorrhage (P=0.069), and decreased presenting Glasgow Coma Scale (P=0.076). Upon multivariate analysis, increased Fazekas score (OR 2.04, 95% CI 1.21-3.43, P=0.008), presenting SBP (OR 1.04, 95% CI 1.00-1.06, P=0.014), and preoperative angiogram (OR 10.35, 95% CI 1.44-74.36], P=0.020) were predictive of DWI burden. Conclusions: In this unique postoperative ICH cohort, white matter changes, presenting SBP, and preoperative angiogram predicted DWI lesion burden. Larger studies are needed to understand the implications of DWI burden after MIS for ICH recovery.

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