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Detection of ischemic penumbra using combined perfusion and T2* oxygen challenge imaging

BACKGROUND: Acute ischemic stroke is common and disabling, but there remains a paucity of acute treatment options and available treatment (thrombolysis) is underutilized. Advanced brain imaging, designed to identify viable hypoperfused tissue (penumbra), could target treatment to a wider population....

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Autores principales: Robertson, Craig A, McCabe, Christopher, Lopez-Gonzalez, M Rosario, Deuchar, Graeme A, Dani, Krishna, Holmes, William M, Muir, Keith W, Santosh, Celestine, Macrae, I Mhairi
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BlackWell Publishing Ltd 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4283703/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25042078
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/ijs.12327
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author Robertson, Craig A
McCabe, Christopher
Lopez-Gonzalez, M Rosario
Deuchar, Graeme A
Dani, Krishna
Holmes, William M
Muir, Keith W
Santosh, Celestine
Macrae, I Mhairi
author_facet Robertson, Craig A
McCabe, Christopher
Lopez-Gonzalez, M Rosario
Deuchar, Graeme A
Dani, Krishna
Holmes, William M
Muir, Keith W
Santosh, Celestine
Macrae, I Mhairi
author_sort Robertson, Craig A
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Acute ischemic stroke is common and disabling, but there remains a paucity of acute treatment options and available treatment (thrombolysis) is underutilized. Advanced brain imaging, designed to identify viable hypoperfused tissue (penumbra), could target treatment to a wider population. Existing magnetic resonance imaging and computed tomography-based technologies are not widely used pending validation in ongoing clinical trials. T2* oxygen challenge magnetic resonance imaging, by providing a more direct readout of tissue viability, has the potential to identify more patients likely to benefit from thrombolysis – irrespective of time from stroke onset – and patients within and beyond the 4·5 h thrombolysis treatment window who are unlikely to benefit and are at an increased risk of hemorrhage. AIMS: This study employs serial multimodal imaging and voxel-based analysis to develop optimal data processing for T2* oxygen challenge penumbra assessment. Tissue in the ischemic hemisphere is compartmentalized into penumbra, ischemic core, or normal using T2* oxygen challenge (single threshold) or T2* oxygen challenge plus cerebral blood flow (dual threshold) data. Penumbra defined by perfusion imaging/apparent diffusion coefficient mismatch (dual threshold) is included for comparison. METHODS: Permanent middle cerebral artery occlusion was induced in male Sprague-Dawley rats (n = 6) prior to serial multimodal imaging: T2* oxygen challenge, diffusion-weighted and perfusion imaging (cerebral blood flow using arterial spin labeling). RESULTS: Across the different methods evaluated, T2* oxygen challenge combined with perfusion imaging most closely predicted 24 h infarct volume. Penumbra volume declined from one to four-hours post-stroke: mean ± SD, 77 ± 44 to 49 ± 37 mm(3) (single T2* oxygen challenge-based threshold); 55 ± 41 to 37 ± 12 mm(3) (dual T2* oxygen challenge/cerebral blood flow); 84 ± 64 to 42 ± 18 mm(3) (dual cerebral blood flow/apparent diffusion coefficient), as ischemic core grew: 155 ± 37 to 211 ± 36 mm(3) (single apparent diffusion coefficient threshold); 178 ± 56 to 205 ± 33 mm(3) (dual T2* oxygen challenge/cerebral blood flow); 139 ± 30 to 168 ± 38 mm(3) (dual cerebral blood flow/apparent diffusion coefficient). There was evidence of further lesion growth beyond four-hours (T2-defined edema-corrected infarct, 231 ± 19 mm(3)). CONCLUSIONS: In conclusion, T2* oxygen challenge combined with perfusion imaging has advantages over alternative magnetic resonance imaging techniques for penumbra detection by providing serial assessment of available penumbra based on tissue viability.
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spelling pubmed-42837032015-01-14 Detection of ischemic penumbra using combined perfusion and T2* oxygen challenge imaging Robertson, Craig A McCabe, Christopher Lopez-Gonzalez, M Rosario Deuchar, Graeme A Dani, Krishna Holmes, William M Muir, Keith W Santosh, Celestine Macrae, I Mhairi Int J Stroke Research BACKGROUND: Acute ischemic stroke is common and disabling, but there remains a paucity of acute treatment options and available treatment (thrombolysis) is underutilized. Advanced brain imaging, designed to identify viable hypoperfused tissue (penumbra), could target treatment to a wider population. Existing magnetic resonance imaging and computed tomography-based technologies are not widely used pending validation in ongoing clinical trials. T2* oxygen challenge magnetic resonance imaging, by providing a more direct readout of tissue viability, has the potential to identify more patients likely to benefit from thrombolysis – irrespective of time from stroke onset – and patients within and beyond the 4·5 h thrombolysis treatment window who are unlikely to benefit and are at an increased risk of hemorrhage. AIMS: This study employs serial multimodal imaging and voxel-based analysis to develop optimal data processing for T2* oxygen challenge penumbra assessment. Tissue in the ischemic hemisphere is compartmentalized into penumbra, ischemic core, or normal using T2* oxygen challenge (single threshold) or T2* oxygen challenge plus cerebral blood flow (dual threshold) data. Penumbra defined by perfusion imaging/apparent diffusion coefficient mismatch (dual threshold) is included for comparison. METHODS: Permanent middle cerebral artery occlusion was induced in male Sprague-Dawley rats (n = 6) prior to serial multimodal imaging: T2* oxygen challenge, diffusion-weighted and perfusion imaging (cerebral blood flow using arterial spin labeling). RESULTS: Across the different methods evaluated, T2* oxygen challenge combined with perfusion imaging most closely predicted 24 h infarct volume. Penumbra volume declined from one to four-hours post-stroke: mean ± SD, 77 ± 44 to 49 ± 37 mm(3) (single T2* oxygen challenge-based threshold); 55 ± 41 to 37 ± 12 mm(3) (dual T2* oxygen challenge/cerebral blood flow); 84 ± 64 to 42 ± 18 mm(3) (dual cerebral blood flow/apparent diffusion coefficient), as ischemic core grew: 155 ± 37 to 211 ± 36 mm(3) (single apparent diffusion coefficient threshold); 178 ± 56 to 205 ± 33 mm(3) (dual T2* oxygen challenge/cerebral blood flow); 139 ± 30 to 168 ± 38 mm(3) (dual cerebral blood flow/apparent diffusion coefficient). There was evidence of further lesion growth beyond four-hours (T2-defined edema-corrected infarct, 231 ± 19 mm(3)). CONCLUSIONS: In conclusion, T2* oxygen challenge combined with perfusion imaging has advantages over alternative magnetic resonance imaging techniques for penumbra detection by providing serial assessment of available penumbra based on tissue viability. BlackWell Publishing Ltd 2015-01 2014-07-15 /pmc/articles/PMC4283703/ /pubmed/25042078 http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/ijs.12327 Text en © 2014 The Authors. International Journal of Stroke published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of World Stroke Organization. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research
Robertson, Craig A
McCabe, Christopher
Lopez-Gonzalez, M Rosario
Deuchar, Graeme A
Dani, Krishna
Holmes, William M
Muir, Keith W
Santosh, Celestine
Macrae, I Mhairi
Detection of ischemic penumbra using combined perfusion and T2* oxygen challenge imaging
title Detection of ischemic penumbra using combined perfusion and T2* oxygen challenge imaging
title_full Detection of ischemic penumbra using combined perfusion and T2* oxygen challenge imaging
title_fullStr Detection of ischemic penumbra using combined perfusion and T2* oxygen challenge imaging
title_full_unstemmed Detection of ischemic penumbra using combined perfusion and T2* oxygen challenge imaging
title_short Detection of ischemic penumbra using combined perfusion and T2* oxygen challenge imaging
title_sort detection of ischemic penumbra using combined perfusion and t2* oxygen challenge imaging
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4283703/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25042078
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/ijs.12327
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