Acute ischemic stroke diagnosis using brain tissue pulsations.

J Neurol Sci

Department of Cardiovascular Sciences, University of Leicester, Leicester, UK; University Hospitals of Leicester NHS Trust, Leicester, UK; NIHR Leicester Biomedical Research Centre, University of Leicester, Leicester, UK. Electronic address:

Published: December 2020

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates whether brain tissue pulsations (BTPs) are affected in patients with acute ischemic stroke compared to healthy individuals, using a new ultrasound method called Transcranial Tissue Doppler (TCTD).
  • Researchers found that BTPs in stroke patients were weaker and displayed waveform disruption, indicating potential impairment due to ischemia.
  • Although the initial analysis showed high sensitivity for detecting strokes, it lacked specificity, suggesting that more research with larger groups is needed to validate these results and explore the clinical usefulness of TCTD monitoring.

Article Abstract

Healthy brain tissue pulsates with the cardiac cycle, but whether brain tissue pulsations (BTPs) are impaired by tissue ischemia due to ischemic stroke is currently unclear. This study is the first to explore the clinical potential of measuring BTPs using ultrasound in acute ischemic stroke patients. BTPs were measured in 24 healthy volunteers (aged 52-82 years) and 14 acute ischemic stroke patients (aged 51-86 years) using a novel Transcranial Tissue Doppler (TCTD) method. Measurements were quick to perform and were well tolerated by all subjects. A mixed-methods approach was used for blinded analysis of recordings. This identified qualitative disruption of BTPs in acute stroke patients, which were used to create an analysis checklist. Blinded BTP analysis by novices using the checklist resulted in high sensitivity but low specificity for stroke detection. Quantitative analysis also identified differences between stroke and healthy participants, including weaker BTPs in stroke patients. This first study reporting BTP characteristics in acute ischemic stroke revealed weaker brain tissue pulsations and waveform disruption in acute stroke patients. However, further clinical evaluation using a larger sample size is required to confirm these findings and to explore whether TCTD monitoring might be beneficial for clinical neuromonitoring.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jns.2020.117164DOI Listing

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