Background and Purpose- For patients with emergent large vessel occlusion who may not benefit from timely recanalization treatment, maintaining adequate cerebral perfusion to prevent penumbral tissue loss is a key therapeutic strategy. Cerebral perfusion should be proportional to systemic blood pressure (BP) due to the loss of autoregulation properties in ischemic brain tissue. We hypothesized that acute fluctuations in BP would lead to aggravated penumbral tissue loss in persistent large vessel occlusion. Methods- A total of 80 patients with persistent large vessel occlusion of internal carotid artery or middle cerebral artery admitted within 24 hours after onset, and with a baseline, National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale score ≥4-point were included. Baseline and follow-up (median 88 hours) magnetic resonance images were analyzed, and penumbra was defined as the T>6 s region excluding baseline infarction. The hypoperfusion intensity ratio (T>10 s/T>6 s) was calculated within the penumbra. Penumbral tissue loss (%) was defined as the proportion of follow-up infarct in the penumbra. With serial BP measurements in the first 24 hours (median 29, interquartile range 26-35), BP and BP variability parameters, including BP (change from local maxima to minima), were calculated and compared. Generalized linear models were applied to examine the association between BP parameters and the penumbral tissue loss. Results- The median penumbral volume was 79.3 mL (interquartile range, 38.2-129.6) and median penumbral tissue loss was 36.7% (interquartile range, 12.0-56.1). In a multivariable analysis, systolic BP (SBP) SBP (β±SE of fourth quartile, 17.82±6.58; value, 0.01) and diastolic BP (DBP) DBP (β±SE of fourth quartile, 14.04±6.38; value, 0.01) were associated with increasing penumbral tissue loss, independently of age, baseline infarction and hypoperfusion intensity ratio. DBP, SBP, DBP, SBP, DBP, and most of the DBP variability indices were associated with penumbral tissue loss. Conclusions- BP fluctuations, even a brief and drastic BP drop in the first 24 hours, significantly contributed to penumbral tissue loss irrespective of baseline hypoperfusion.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1161/STROKEAHA.119.025426 | DOI Listing |
Stroke
January 2025
Department of Neurology, National Center for Neurological Disorders, National Clinical Research Centre for Aging and Medicine, Huashan Hospital, Fudan University, Shanghai, China (X.C., L.H., Y.L., Yiran Zhang, X.L., S.L., L.Y., Q.D.).
Background: Whether it is effective and safe to extend the time window of intravenous thrombolysis up to 24 hours after the last known well is unknown. We aimed to determine the efficacy and safety of tenecteplase in Chinese patients with acute ischemic stroke due to large/medium vessel occlusion within an extended time window.
Methods: Patients with ischemic stroke presenting 4.
Objectives: To observe the effect of eye-acupuncture on the antioxidant function axis:System xc(-)-glutathione-glutathione peroxidase 4 (System xc[-]-GSH-GPX4) in the cortical tissue of ischemic penumbra of acute cerebral ischemia-reperfusion injury (CIRI) rats, so as to explore its underlying mechanism in improvement of CIRI by ameliorating the ferroptosis of neurons via antioxidant function axis.
Methods: Male SD rats were randomly divided into sham operation, model, eye-acupuncture and GPX4-inhibitor groups, with 15 rats in each group. The CIRI model was replicated by occlusion of the middle cerebral artery and reperfusion for 24 h.
Int J Stroke
December 2024
Department of Medicine, University of Melbourne, Parkville, Victoria, Australia.
Front Cell Neurosci
November 2024
TECNALIA, Basque Research and Technology Alliance (BRTA), San Sebastian, Spain.
Ischemic stroke consists of rapid neural death as a consequence of brain vessel obstruction, followed by damage to the neighboring tissue known as ischemic penumbra. The cerebral tissue in the core of the lesions becomes irreversibly damaged, however, the ischemic penumbra is potentially recoverable during the initial phases after the stroke. Therefore, there is real need for emerging therapeutic strategies to reduce ischemic damage and its spread to the penumbral region.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt J Stroke
October 2024
Department of Neurology, University Hospitals Leuven, Leuven, Belgium.
Background: In patients with an acute ischemic stroke, the penumbra is defined as ischemic tissue that remains salvageable when reperfusion occurs. However, the expected clinical recovery congruent with penumbral salvage is not always observed.
Aims: We aimed to determine whether the magnetic resonance imaging (MRI)-defined penumbra includes irreversible neuronal loss that impedes expected clinical recovery after reperfusion.
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