Abstract

Introduction: Intracranial atherosclerotic disease (ICAD) is a common cause of ischemic stroke worldwide and carries a high rate of recurrence. Follow-up of symptomatic ICAD routinely relies on assessment of lumen stenosis. Magnetic resonance vessel wall imaging (MR-VWI) has recently demonstrated the potential to reliably quantify plaque features. This work presents our experience in using serial MR-VWI to quantify the morphological changes of culprit lesions in response to medical therapy in patients with symptomatic ICAD. Methods: Twenty-four patients (4 females; age 46.75±14.05 years) with acute ischemic stroke secondary to ICAD underwent baseline (1-44 days after onset) and follow-up (3-15 months after baseline) 3D whole-brain MR-VWI, which was used to acquire pre- and post-contrast images. Quantitative plaque features, including plaque volume, peak normalized wall index (pNWI), maximum wall thickness, stenosis degree, pre-contrast plaque-wall contrast ratio (CR), and post-contrast plaque enhancement ratio (ER), were derived from both baseline and follow-up MR-VWI scans. Patients with 18-month clinical follow-up were divided into progression and non-progression groups depending on whether major vascular events (stroke, TIA, death) occurred. Results: Seventeen patients were categorized into the non-progression group and 4 into the progression group. Maximum wall thickness (P=0.047), CR (P=0.020) and ER (P=0.012) showed significant decreases in the non-progression group. In the progression group, all 4 patients showed an increase in pNWI, stenosis degree and CR; plaque volume, maximum wall thickness and ER increased in three patients. Typical cases are shown in Figure. Conclusions: Quantitative assessment of lesion-specific responses to medical therapy is clinically feasible with serial MR-VWI. The changes of plaque over time may be useful for ischemic stroke risk stratification with implications for ICAD medical management.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call