Abstract

Spreading depolarization describes a near-complete electrical discharge with altered local cerebral blood flow. It is described in association with acute and chronic diseases like hemorrhagic stroke or migraine. Moyamoya vasculopathy is a chronic, progressive cerebrovascular disorder leading to cerebral hypoperfusion, hemodynamically insufficient basal collateralization, and increased cortical microvascularization. In a prospective case series, we monitored for spontaneous spreading depolarization activity by using intraoperative laser speckle imaging for real-time visualization and measurement of cortical perfusion and cerebrovascular reserve capacity during cerebral revascularization in 4 consecutive patients with moyamoya. Spontaneous spreading depolarization occurrence was documented in a patient with moyamoya before bypass grafting. Interestingly, this patient also exhibited a marked preoperative increase in angiographic collateral vessel formation. The spontaneous occurrence of SDs in moyamoya vasculopathy could potentially provide an explanation for localized cortical infarction and increased cortical microvascular density in these patients.

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