AI Article Synopsis

  • - The study evaluated the relationship between cerebral blood flow (CBF) and outcomes after endovascular therapy (EVT) for acute stroke using diffuse correlation spectroscopy (DCS) to monitor CBF in 40 patients.
  • - Results showed that while successful recanalization was achieved in most patients, the amount of microvascular reperfusion did not directly correlate with infarct volume or functional outcomes; instead, smaller persistent CBF deficits were linked to better outcomes.
  • - The findings suggest that monitoring CBF during EVT could help identify patients with inadequate reperfusion, allowing for more tailored post-treatment care to improve recovery.

Article Abstract

Background: Endovascular therapy (EVT) has revolutionized the treatment of acute stroke, but large vessel recanalization does not always result in tissue-level reperfusion. Cerebral blood flow (CBF) is not routinely monitored during EVT. We aimed to leverage diffuse correlation spectroscopy (DCS), a novel transcranial optical imaging technique, to assess the relationship between microvascular CBF and post-EVT outcomes.

Methods: Frontal lobe CBF was monitored by DCS in 40 patients undergoing EVT. Baseline CBF deficit was calculated as the percentage of CBF impairment on pre-EVT CT perfusion. Microvascular reperfusion was calculated as the percentage increase in DCS-derived CBF that occurred with recanalization. The adequacy of reperfusion was defined by persistent CBF deficit, calculated as: baseline CBF deficit - microvascular reperfusion. A good functional outcome was defined as 90-day modified Rankin Scale score ≤2.

Results: Thirty-six of 40 patients achieved successful recanalization, in whom microvascular reperfusion in itself was not associated with infarct volume or functional outcome. However, patients with good functional outcomes had a smaller persistent CBF deficit (median 1% (IQR -11%-16%)) than patients with poor outcomes (median 28% (IQR 2-50%)) (p=0.02). Smaller persistent CBF deficit was also associated with smaller infarct volume (p=0.004). Multivariate models confirmed that persistent CBF deficit was independently associated with infarct volume and functional outcome.

Conclusions: CBF augmentation alone does not predict post-EVT outcomes, but when microvascular reperfusion closely matches the baseline CBF deficit, patients experience favorable clinical and radiographic outcomes. By recognizing inadequate reperfusion, bedside CBF monitoring may provide opportunities to personalize post-EVT care aimed at CBF optimization.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11055937PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/jnis-2023-020834DOI Listing

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