Abstract

The use of the internal maxillary artery (IMA) in intracranial artery bypass or subcranial-intracranial (SC-IC) bypass has recently been described as an alternative to traditional bypass. This study explores cerebral glucose metabolism characteristics of SC-IC bypass. Ten crescendo transient ischemic attack (TIA) patients with chronic occlusion of the middle cerebral artery (MCA) received bypass surgery of IMA with the radial artery graft (RAG) to the branch of MCA. The graft's flow volume (FV) was measured by operative intraoperative duplex ultrasonography. Positron emission tomography (PET)/computed tomography (CT) was used to calculate the preoperational and postoperational average of the standard uptake value (SUVavg) of the 18-fluoro-2-deoxy-D-glucose (18F-FDG) in the region of interest (ROI). The asymmetric index (AI) is recommended to reflect the SUVavg changes, and subsequently, cerebral glucose metabolism changes are supposedly clarified. Patent IMA-RAG-MCA bypass in ten chronic ischemia patients was confirmed by angiography after surgery. The intraoperative FV measurement value was 65.64 ± 10.52 (58.11-73.17) ml/min. Before the operation, the SUVavg of the ROI in the ischemic hemisphere (4.76 ± 2.35 (3.08-6.04)) clearly decreased compared to the one (5.99 ± 2.63 (4.11-7.87)) in the contralateral mirror region (P = 0.003). The result of AI of preoperation minus AI of postoperation was more than 10% (P = 0.031), which indicated suspicious significant changes in cerebral metabolism. All symptoms of study patients having crescendo ischemia were resolved in 1month after the operation. In the cerebral hypoperfusion territory, uptake of 18F-FDG deceased. Improving the flow volume via SC-IC bypass makes available an elevated uptake of 18F-FDG.

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