Affiliation:
1. Centre for Clinical Brain Sciences, University of Edinburgh, United Kingdom (A. Alzahrani).
2. Department of Diagnostic Radiology, Faculty of Applied Medical Sciences, King Abdulaziz University, Jeddah, Saudi Arabia (A. Alzahrani).
3. School of Medicine, University of Dundee, United Kingdom (X.Z.).
4. Department of Radiology, King Abdulaziz University Hospital, Jeddah, Saudi Arabia (A. Albukhari).
5. Edinburgh Imaging, and UK Dementia Research Institute at the University of Edinburgh and Centre for Clinical Brain Sciences, University of Edinburgh, United Kingdom (J.M.W., G.M.).
Abstract
Background:
Treatment for ischemic stroke can be offered beyond conventional time limits for patients with favorable computed tomography perfusion (CTP), but this is not universally available. We sought a threshold for brain attenuation on nonenhanced computed tomography (NECT) to differentiate CTP-defined penumbra vs core, and correlated NECT features with CTP.
Methods:
We retrospectively assessed consecutive patients presenting to King Abdulaziz University Hospital with ischemic stroke (2017–2020), baseline NECT, and a visible defect on concurrent CTP. Using CTP as the reference standard, we measured the attenuation of ischemic and healthy contralateral brain on NECT to produce attenuation ratios (ischemic/normal) for penumbra and core. We used area under the receiver operating characteristic curve to estimate the optimal computed tomography (CT) attenuation ratio for penumbra. Per patient, we qualitatively assessed 8 regions within the affected cerebral hemisphere: on NECT as normal, hypoattenuating (with/out swelling), or isolated swelling and on CTP as normal, penumbra, or core. We sought associations between isolated swelling and penumbra, and between hypoattenuation and core.
Results:
We include 142 patients (86 male), mean age 61±14 years. Median 261 minutes (interquartile range, 173–382) to NECT. We measured 206 ischemic lesions (124 penumbra, 82 core). Optimal CT attenuation ratio for identifying penumbra was >0.87, with 86% sensitivity 91% specificity (area under the receiver operating characteristic curve, 0.95 [95% CI, 0.92–0.98];
P
<0.0001). We qualitatively assessed 976 cerebral regions (72 isolated swelling, 254 hypoattenuation). On NECT, isolated swelling usually corresponded to CTP penumbra (70/72, 97%), whereas visible NECT hypoattenuation was found with core (141/254, 56%) and penumbra (109/254, 43%). CTP core lesions were rarely normal on NECT (13/155, 8%).
Conclusions:
After ischemic stroke, brain tissue viability can be assessed using NECT. Isolated swelling is highly specific to penumbra. Visible hypoattenuation does not always represent core, nearly half of such lesions were penumbral on concurrent CTP and can be differentiated by measuring lesion attenuation.
Publisher
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)
Subject
Advanced and Specialized Nursing,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine,Neurology (clinical)
Cited by
3 articles.
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