Author:
Mikulis David J.,Krolczyk Gregory,Desal Hubert,Logan William,deVeber Gabrielle,Dirks Peter,Tymianski Michael,Crawley Adrian,Vesely Alex,Kassner Andrea,Preiss David,Somogyi Ron,Fisher Joseph A.
Abstract
Object. The ability to map cerebrovascular reactivity (CVR) at the tissue level in patients with moyamoya disease could have considerable impact on patient management, especially in guiding surgical intervention and assessing the effectiveness of surgical revascularization. This paper introduces a new noninvasive magnetic resonance (MR) imaging—based method to map CVR. Preoperative and postoperative results are reported in three cases to demonstrate the efficacy of this technique in assessing vascular reserve at the microvascular level.
Methods. Three patients with angiographically confirmed moyamoya disease were evaluated before and after surgical revascularization. Measurements of CVR were obtained by rapidly manipulating end-tidal PCO2 between hypercapnic and hypocapnic states during MR imaging. The CVR maps were then calculated by comparing the percentage of changes in MR signal with changes in end-tidal PCO2.
Presurgical CVR maps showed distinct regions of positive and negative reactivity that correlated precisely with the vascular territories supplied by severely narrowed vessels. Postsurgical reactivity maps demonstrated improvement in the two patients with positive clinical outcome and no change in the patient in whom a failed superficial temporal artery—middle cerebral artery bypass was performed.
Conclusions. Magnetic imaging—based CVR mapping during rapid manipulation of end-tidal PCO2 is an exciting new method for determining the location and extent of abnormal vascular reactivity secondary to proximal large-vessel stenoses in moyamoya disease. Although the study group is small, there seems to be considerable potential for guiding preoperative decisions and monitoring efficacy of surgical revascularization.
Publisher
Journal of Neurosurgery Publishing Group (JNSPG)
Cited by
98 articles.
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