Abstract
Time constant of the cerebral arterial bed (τ) is a transcranial Doppler (TCD) based metric that is expected to quantify the transit time of red blood cells from the insonation point to the arteriole-capillary boundary during a cardiac cycle. This study aims to assess the potential of τ as an early predictor of delayed cerebral ischemia (DCI). Consecutive patients (56 ± 15 years) treated for aneurysmal subarachnoid haemorrhage were included in the study. τ was assessed through a modelling approach that involved simultaneous recordings of arterial blood pressure and cerebral blood flow velocity (CBFV) from TCD's first recordings. 71 patients were included. 17 patients experienced DCI. τ was significantly shorter in patients who later developed DCI: 187 ± 64 ms vs. 249 ± 184 ms; p = 0.040 with moderate effect size (rG = 0.24). Logistic regression showed that there was a significant association between increased CBFV, shortened τ, and the development of DCI (χ2 = 11.54; p = 0.003) with AUC for the model 0.75. Patients who had both shortened τ and increased CBFV were 20 times more likely to develop DCI (OR = 20.4 (2.2–187.7)). Our results suggest that early alterations in τ are associated with DCI after aSAH. The highest performance of the model including both CBFV and τ may suggest the importance of both macrovascular and microvascular changes assessment.
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