Analysis of vascular perfusion territory using selective intraarterial injection CT angiography before and after revascularization surgery in patients with moyamoya disease

Author:

Tateoka Toru1,Yoshioka Hideyuki1,Wakai Takuma1,Hashimoto Koji1,Ogiwara Masakazu1,Kinouchi Hiroyuki1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Neurosurgery, Interdisciplinary Graduate School of Medicine and Engineering, University of Yamanashi, Japan

Abstract

OBJECTIVE In moyamoya disease (MMD), blood flow to the internal carotid artery (ICA) system is supplied via the basal fine vascular network, leptomeningeal anastomoses, and transdural collateral vessels from the external carotid artery (ECA). After revascularization, there is a dramatic change in cerebral perfusion to the ECA system. Understanding this shift in blood supply is important for evaluating treatment efficacy and elucidating the postoperative pathophysiology. However, anatomical and quantitative methods for doing so have not yet been established. In the present study, selective intraarterial injection CT angiography (iaCTA) was performed in patients with MMD, and blood supply changes in each arterial system before and after revascularization surgery were evaluated. METHODS This study included 10 hemispheres in 10 patients who underwent combined revascularization surgery for adult MMD. Digital subtraction angiography was performed before and 3 months after surgery, and selective iaCTA was performed from the ICA, ECA, and vertebral artery (VA) at the same times in a hybrid CT/digital subtraction angiography suite. The anatomical distribution of each vessel was determined and perfusion volume was measured quantitatively on contrast-enhanced axial CT images. RESULTS Selective iaCTA clearly depicted the anatomical distribution of perfusion for each vessel. Conversion of blood supply from the ICA and VA to the ECA system was observed in the cerebral cortices and insulae but not in the basal ganglia. The mean volume of perfusion territories of the ECA (preoperative 0.9 cm3, postoperative 98.8 cm3); ICA (preoperative 225.7 cm3, postoperative 159.3 cm3); and VA (preoperative 244.0 cm3, postoperative 163.6 cm3) in the cerebral hemispheres changed significantly after revascularization. There was a correlation between increase in the ECA territory volume and decrease in the VA territory volume due to revascularization (R = −0.84, p < 0.005). CONCLUSIONS Selective iaCTA enabled clear visualization of anatomical changes in each vascular perfusion territory and quantitative measurement of each perfusion volume. Perfusion conversion to the ECA system after bypass surgery was observed in the cortical regions and in the insulae on the bypass operation sides, but not in the basal ganglia. Combined revascularization promoted the development of ECA-perfused territory, which correlated with a decrease in hemodynamic burden of the posterior cerebral artery.

Publisher

Journal of Neurosurgery Publishing Group (JNSPG)

Subject

Genetics,Animal Science and Zoology

Reference27 articles.

1. Cerebrovascular "moyamoya" disease. Disease showing abnormal net-like vessels in base of brain;Suzuki J,1969

2. Quantitative angiographic hemodynamic evaluation after revascularization surgery for moyamoya disease;Chen Y,2020

3. Revascularization evaluation in adult-onset moyamoya disease after bypass surgery: superselective arterial spin labeling perfusion MRI compared with digital subtraction angiography;Hwang I,2020

4. Cerebral perfusion territory changes after direct revascularization surgery in moyamoya disease: a territory arterial spin labeling study;Yuan J,2019

5. Quantitative analysis of revascularization in ischemic moyamoya disease via whole-brain computed tomography perfusion: a retrospective single-center study;Han Q,2020

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