Abstract

BackgroundWhether there are differences in pathogenesis among different types and subtypes of cerebral watershed infarction (WSI) is controversial since they have been combined into a single group in most previous studies.MethodsWe prospectively identified 340 supratentorial WSI patients at Beijing Chao-Yang Hospital, Capital Medical University, China and classified them based on diffusion-weighted imaging(DWI) templates. Baseline characteristics, clinical courses and neuroradiological features were compared among patients with different types and subtypes of WSI.ResultsWe identified 92 patients with cortical watershed infarction (CWI), 112 with internal watershed infarction (IWI) and 136 with mixed-type infarction. Compared with CWI patients, more IWI patients had critical stenosis of internal carotid artery (ICA) (P < 0.001). For the CWI group, patients with anterior watershed infarction (AWI) were more prone to critical ICA stenosis than those with posterior watershed infarction (PWI) (P = 0.011). For the IWI group, critical ICA stenosis was more prevalent in patients with partial IWI (P-IWI) than in those with confluent IWI (C-IWI) (P = 0.026). IWI patients were more frequently found to have clinical deterioration during the first 7 days of hospitalization and a poor prognosis at the 90th day than in CWI patients (P = 0.003 and P = 0.014, respectively).ConclusionsIWI, especially the P-IWI subtype, is associated with hemodynamic impairment (HDI), whereas CWI has a weaker correlation with ICA steno-occlusion. Furthermore, IWI patients are more prone to poor prognosis.

Highlights

  • Whether there are differences in pathogenesis among different types and subtypes of cerebral watershed infarction (WSI) is controversial since they have been combined into a single group in most previous studies

  • In this study, we demonstrated that internal watershed infarction (IWI), especially the partial IWI (P-IWI) subtype, is associated with hemodynamic impairment (HDI) and that IWI patients are more prone to poor prognosis

  • This is the first study to investigate the mechanisms of different types and subtypes of WSI, for particular, the mixed-type infarction defined here as the concurrence of cortical watershed infarction (CWI) and IWI

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Summary

Introduction

Whether there are differences in pathogenesis among different types and subtypes of cerebral watershed infarction (WSI) is controversial since they have been combined into a single group in most previous studies. Hemodynamic impairment (HDI) has been widely accepted as a cause of WSI [1], but microemboli may contribute to it [2]. It is unclear whether the mechanism differs among different types and subtypes of WSI since most previous studies either combined CWI and IWI into a single group or focused only on one type or subtype of WSI. Cases where both CWI and IWI are present, which are named mixed-type infarction in our study, have never been included in previous studies

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