Abstract

BackgroundWe tested the hypothesis that in patients with occlusion of the terminal internal carotid artery and/or the proximal middle cerebral artery, a diffusion abnormality of 70 ml or less is accompanied by a diffusion/perfusion mismatch of at least 100%.MethodsSixty-eight consecutive patients with terminal ICA and/or proximal MCA occlusions and who underwent diffusion/perfusion MRI within 24 hours of stroke onset were retrospectively identified. DWI and mean transit time (MTT) volumes were measured. Prospectively, 48 consecutive patients were identified with the same inclusion criteria. DWI and time to peak (TTP) lesion volumes were measured. A large mismatch volume was defined as an MTT or TTP abnormality at least twice the DWI lesion volume.ResultsIn the retrospective study, 49 of 68 patients had a DWI lesion volume ≤ 70 ml (mean 20.2 ml; SEM 2.9 ml). A DWI/MTT mismatch of > 100% was observed in all 49 patients (P < .0001). In the prospective study, there were 35/48 patients with DWI volumes ≤ 70 ml (mean 18.7 ml; SEM 3.0 ml). A mismatch > 100% was present in all 35 (P < .0001).ConclusionsAcute stroke patients with major anterior circulation artery occlusion are exceedingly likely to have a major diffusion/perfusion mismatch if the diffusion lesion volume is 70 ml or less. This suggests that physiology-based patient assessments may be made using only vessel imaging and diffusion MRI as a simple alternative to perfusion imaging.

Highlights

  • We tested the hypothesis that in patients with occlusion of the terminal internal carotid artery and/or the proximal middle cerebral artery, a diffusion abnormality of 70 ml or less is accompanied by a diffusion/perfusion mismatch of at least 100%

  • They commonly have severe neurological deficits and are at high risk of having a poor outcome such as death or dependent life. This is because occlusions of the terminal internal carotid artery (ICA) and/or the middle cerebral artery (MCA) interrupt blood flow to the MCA territory, which comprises a large proportion of the cerebral hemisphere that includes much eloquent cortex

  • The patients underwent imaging that included CT angiography (CTA) followed by diffusion/perfusion MRI

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Summary

Introduction

We tested the hypothesis that in patients with occlusion of the terminal internal carotid artery and/or the proximal middle cerebral artery, a diffusion abnormality of 70 ml or less is accompanied by a diffusion/perfusion mismatch of at least 100%. Patients with a major ischemic stroke syndrome due to an occlusion of a major anterior circulation artery constitute an important subset of stroke patients. They commonly have severe neurological deficits and are at high risk of having a poor outcome such as death or dependent life. This is because occlusions of the terminal internal carotid artery (ICA) and/or the middle cerebral artery (MCA) interrupt blood flow to the MCA territory, which comprises a large proportion of the cerebral hemisphere that includes much eloquent cortex. All agree that patients with small regions of infarction and large areas of poorly perfused brain tissue are likely to benefit from reperfusion and those with large infarcts and small areas of uninfarcted poorly perfused brain are poor candidates

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