Venous cerebral blood flow quantification and cognition in patients with sickle cell anemia

Author:

Stotesbury Hanne1ORCID,Hales Patrick W1,Koelbel Melanie1ORCID,Hood Anna M1ORCID,Kawadler Jamie M1,Saunders Dawn E2,Sahota Sati1,Rees David C3,Wilkey Olu4,Layton Mark5,Pelidis Maria6,Inusa Baba PD6,Howard Jo6,Chakravorty Subarna3,Clark Chris A1,Kirkham Fenella J1

Affiliation:

1. Developmental Neurosciences, UCL Great Ormond St. Institute of Child Health, London, UK

2. Division of Psychology and Mental Health, Manchester Centre for Health Psychology, University of Manchester, Manchester, UK

3. Radiology, Great Ormond Hospital for Children NHS Trust, London, UK

4. King’s College London, London, UK

5. North Middlesex University Hospital NHS Foundation Trust, London, UK

6. Haematology, Imperial College Healthcare NHS Foundation Trust, London, UK

Abstract

Prior studies have described high venous signal qualitatively using arterial spin labelling (ASL) in patients with sickle cell anemia (SCA), consistent with arteriovenous shunting. We aimed to quantify the effect and explored cross-sectional associations with arterial oxygen content (CaO2), disease-modifying treatments, silent cerebral infarction (SCI), and cognitive performance. 94 patients with SCA and 42 controls underwent cognitive assessment and MRI with single- and multi- inflow time (TI) ASL sequences. Cerebral blood flow (CBF) and bolus arrival time (BAT) were examined across gray and white matter and high-signal regions of the sagittal sinus. Across gray and white matter, increases in CBF and reductions in BAT were observed in association with reduced CaO2 in patients, irrespective of sequence. Across high-signal sagittal sinus regions, CBF was also increased in association with reduced CaO2 using both sequences. However, BAT was increased rather than reduced in patients across these regions, with no association with CaO2. Using the multiTI sequence in patients, increases in CBF across white matter and high-signal sagittal sinus regions were associated with poorer cognitive performance. These novel findings highlight the utility of multiTI ASL in illuminating, and identifying objectively quantifiable and functionally significant markers of, regional hemodynamic stress in patients with SCA.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine,Neurology (clinical),Neurology

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