Subarachnoid iodine leakage on dual-energy computed tomography after mechanical thrombectomy is associated with malignant brain edema

Author:

Ogata AtsushiORCID,Ogasawara Kuniaki,Nishihara Masashi,Takamori Ayako,Furukawa Takashi,Ide Toshihiro,Ito Hiroshi,Yoshioka Fumitaka,Nakahara Yukiko,Masuoka Jun,Koike Haruki,Irie Hiroyuki,Abe Tatsuya

Abstract

BackgroundDual-energy computed tomography (DE-CT) can differentiate between hemorrhage and iodine contrast medium leakage following mechanical thrombectomy (MT) for acute ischemic stroke (AIS). We determined whether subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH) and subarachnoid iodine leakage (SAIL) on DE-CT following MT were associated with malignant brain edema (MBE).MethodsWe analyzed the medical records of 81 consecutive anterior circulation AIS patients who underwent MT. SAH or SAIL was diagnosed via DE-CT performed immediately after MT. We compared the procedural data, infarct volumes, MBE, and modified Rankin scale 0–2 at 90 days between patients with and without SAH and between patients with and without SAIL. Furthermore, we evaluated the association between patient characteristics and MBE.ResultsA total of 20 (25%) patients had SAH and 51 (63%) had SAIL. No difference in diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI)-infarct volume before MT was observed between patients with and without SAH or patients with and without SAIL. However, patients with SAIL had larger DWI-infarct volumes 1 day following MT than patients without SAIL (95 mL vs 29 mL; p=0.003). MBE occurred in 12 of 81 patients (15%); more patients with SAIL had MBE than patients without SAIL (22% vs 3%; p=0.027). Severe SAIL was significantly associated with MBE (OR, 12.5; 95% CI, 1.20–131; p=0.006), whereas SAH was not associated with MBE.ConclusionThis study demonstrated that SAIL on DE-CT immediately after MT was associated with infarct volume expansion and MBE.

Publisher

BMJ

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