AI Article Synopsis

  • A study investigated the link between perfusion deficits and vessel wall characteristics in patients with chronic anterior circulation large vessel occlusions to assess their risk of recurrent ischemic events.
  • The analysis involved 71 patients, of which 21.1% experienced recurrent ischemic events like strokes or transient ischemic attacks over two years. Key predictors included hypertension, specific imaging findings, and high Tmax deficit volumes.
  • Findings suggest that hypertension, elevated Tmax >4 s, and hyperintense signals from MRI are significant factors in predicting future ischemic events, indicating a need for further research on revascularization strategies in these high-risk patients.

Article Abstract

Background: To investigate the association between perfusion deficit, vessel wall characteristics, and risk of recurrent ischemic events in medically treated patients with chronic symptomatic anterior circulation large vessel occlusion.

Methods: We retrospectively reviewed chronic symptomatic patients due to anterior circulation large vessel occlusion in our center. All patients received multiparametric magnetic resonance imaging (including perfusion-weighted imaging and high-resolution vessel wall imaging) within 4 weeks to 3 months after symptom onset. The association between baseline clinical or imaging variables and recurrent ischemic events was assessed in bivariate models and multivariable logistic regression to identify independent predictors of recurrence.

Results: Among 71 enrolled patients, 21.1% (15/71) patients had recurrent ischemic events (nine ischemic strokes and six transient ischemic attacks) during a 2-year follow-up. In bivariate models, hypertension, occlusion with hyperintense signals, the presence of intraluminal thrombus, Tmax >4 s volume, Tmax >6 s volume, Tmax >8 s volume, and Tmax >10 s volume were associated with recurrence (all  < 0.05). In multivariate analysis, hypertension ( = 0.039, OR 10.057 (95% CI, 1.123-90.048)), higher deficit volume of Tmax >4 s ( = 0.011, OR 1.012 (95% CI, 1.003-1.021)) and occlusion with hyperintense signal ( = 0.030, OR 6.732 (95% CI, 1.200-37.772)) were still independent predictors of recurrent ischemic events.

Conclusions: Besides hypertension history, higher deficit volume of Tmax >4 s and occlusion with hyperintense signal determined using multiparametric MRI are strongly associated with risk for recurrent ischemic events in medically treated patients with chronic symptomatic anterior circulation large vessel occlusion. Future studies are needed to determine the utility of revascularization strategies in such high-risk patients.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11569740PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/15910199241270653DOI Listing

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