Affiliation:
1. Neuroradiology Section, Department of Radiology, University of California at San Francisco, San Francisco, California, U.S.A.
Abstract
Magnetic susceptibility contrast-enhanced and diffusion-weighted echo planar magnetic resonance (MR) imaging was performed using a cat model of acute regional cerebral ischemia induced by partial stenosis of the right middle cerebral artery (MCA). The imaging data were correlated with triphenyltetrazolium chloride (TTC)-stained histopathologic coronal brain sections to determine the prognostic efficacy of high-speed MR imaging techniques in differentiating mild, moderate, and severe cerebral hypoperfusion. Brains of animals without cortical injury on TTC staining were found to have a reduction in peak contrast enhancement of 32 ± 6% (mean ± SD) below control values with no significant change in the apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC), determined from the diffusion-weighted MR images. In cases where moderate ischemic injury was observed in the TTC-stained sections, a 10–20% drop in the ADC was found over the 6-h study period, accompanied by a much wider variation in peak contrast enhancement. Finally, where TTC staining showed severe ischemic brain damage, a 40–50% drop in ADC and a reduction in peak contrast enhancement effect of >95% were observed as early as 1 h following MCA stenosis. The significant correlation between imaging observations and histologically confirmed cerebral ischemia indicates that magnetic susceptibility contrast-enhanced echo planar MR imaging is sensitive to slight reductions in cerebral perfusion that fall below the threshold for reliably detectable ischemia-induced alterations in ADC. First-pass perfusion-sensitive imaging may thus be diagnostically useful in differentiating severely hypoperfused permanently injured tissue from the mildly hypoperfused ischemic penumbra.
Subject
Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine,Clinical Neurology,Neurology
Cited by
90 articles.
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