Hyperacute stroke: simultaneous measurement of relative cerebral blood volume, relative cerebral blood flow, and mean tissue transit time.

@article{Sorensen1999HyperacuteSS,
  title={Hyperacute stroke: simultaneous measurement of relative cerebral blood volume, relative cerebral blood flow, and mean tissue transit time.},
  author={A. Gregory Sorensen and William A Copen and Leif Ostergaard and Ferdinando Buonanno and R. Gilberto Gonzalez and Guy A. Rordorf and Bruce R. Rosen and Lee H. Schwamm and Robert M. Weisskoff and Walter J. Koroshetz},
  journal={Radiology},
  year={1999},
  volume={210 2},
  pages={
          519-27
        }
}
PURPOSE To investigate additional information provided by maps of relative cerebral blood flow in functional magnetic resonance (MR) imaging of human hyperacute cerebral ischemic stroke. MATERIALS AND METHODS Diffusion-weighted and hemodynamic MR imaging were performed in 23 patients less than 12 hours after the onset of symptoms. Maps of relative cerebral blood flow and tracer mean tissue transit time were computed, as were maps of apparent diffusion and relative cerebral blood volume. Acute… 
Comparative evaluation of cerebral blood volume and cerebral blood flow in acute ischemic stroke by using perfusion-weighted MR imaging and SPECT.
PURPOSE To investigate the relationship between relative cerebral blood volume (CBV) measured with perfusion-weighted (PW) MR imaging and relative cerebral blood flow (CBF) measured with SPECT in
Comparative evaluation of cerebral blood volume and cerebral blood flow in acute ischemic stroke by using perfusion-weighted MR imaging and SPECT
Purpose: To investigate the relationship between relative cerebral blood volume (CBV) measured with perfusion-weighted (PW) MR imaging and relative cerebral blood flow (CBF) measured with SPECT in
Clinical and radiological correlates of reduced cerebral blood flow measured using magnetic resonance imaging.
TLDR
Ischemic lesions with severe CBF reductions, measured using bolus-tracking MRI, are associated with lower mean ADCs, larger DWI and PWI volumes, and higher National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale scores.
Combined diffusion-weighted and perfusion-weighted flow heterogeneity magnetic resonance imaging in acute stroke.
TLDR
Flow heterogeneity and MTT can be rapidly assessed as part of a routine clinical MR examination and may provide a tool for planning of individual stroke treatment, as well as in targeting and evaluation of emerging therapeutic strategies.
Which MR-derived perfusion parameters are the best predictors of infarct growth in hyperacute stroke? Comparative study between relative and quantitative measurements.
TLDR
A combination of relative peak height and TTP measurements allowed the best prediction of infarct growth, which obviates more complex quantitative calculation.
Usefulness of Magnetic Resonance-Derived Quantitative Measurements of Cerebral Blood Flow and Volume in Prediction of Infarct Growth in Hyperacute Stroke
TLDR
Quantitative measurements of CBF and CBV in hyperacute stroke may help to predict infarct growth and to select the subjects who will benefit from thrombolysis.
Early evolution of deficits in acute ischemic stroke: mean transit time, relative blood volume, and relative blood flow.
TLDR
The MR changes following acute cerebral infarction are dynamic, with the volume of the diffusion abnormality nearly doubling between 6 to 10 hours and 48 hours and the largest decrease in the size of the MTT volume occurred with recanalized MCA, and all patients had progressive enlargement of the abnormal DWI volume.
Regional Cerebral Blood Volume Ratio on Perfusion MRI on the Growth of Infarct Size in Acute Ischemic Stroke
TLDR
The decreased rCBV ratio on perfusion MRI has a predictive value for the growth of ischemic lesions after acute isChemic stroke with DPM on the TTP map.
Combined perfusion- and diffusion-weighted MR imaging in acute ischemic stroke during the 1st week: a longitudinal study.
TLDR
Combined DW and PW imaging is a powerful tool in evaluating the hemodynamics of acute ischemic stroke.
Perfusion Magnetic Resonance Imaging Maps in Hyperacute Stroke: Relative Cerebral Blood Flow Most Accurately Identifies Tissue Destined to Infarct
TLDR
The acute rCBF lesion most accurately identified tissue in the PWI>DWI mismatch region at risk of infarction, and color-thresholded PWI maps show potential for use in an acute clinical setting to prospectively predict tissue outcome.
...
1
2
3
4
5
...

References

SHOWING 1-10 OF 27 REFERENCES
Regional ischemia and ischemic injury in patients with acute middle cerebral artery stroke as defined by early diffusion-weighted and perfusion-weighted MRI.
TLDR
Most patients with M1 occlusion showed progression of infarction into the region of abnormal perfusion, and application of these MRI techniques should improve definition of different acute stroke syndromes and facilitate clinical decision making.
Fast magnetic resonance diffusion‐weighted imaging of acute human stroke
Rapid MRI of the molecular diffusion of water demonstrated cerebral infarcts in 32 patients. We studied these patients at various times following the onset of ischemic symptoms and found that
Hyperacute stroke: evaluation with combined multisection diffusion-weighted and hemodynamically weighted echo-planar MR imaging.
TLDR
Different aspects of hyperacute cerebral ischemia are depicted at DW and HW imaging before infarction is depicted at conventional MR or CT, which may improve stroke diagnosis and may contribute to advances in treatment.
Enlargement of human cerebral ischemic lesion volumes measured by diffusion‐weighted magnetic resonance imaging
TLDR
Evidence is provided that substantial enlargement of human cerebral ischemic lesion volumes can occur beyond the first 6, 12 or 24 hours after onset and a mismatch acutely between the region of hypoperfusion (larger) and the area of diffusion abnormality (smaller) may be predictive of ischeic lesion enlargement.
Early detection of ischemic injury: comparison of spectroscopy, diffusion-, T2-, and magnetic susceptibility-weighted MRI in cats.
Within one hour following MCA-occlusion in cats, heavily diffusion-weighted spin-echo MR images exhibited a well-defined hyperintensity in the gray matter and basal ganglia of the occluded side over
Ischemic lesion volumes in acute stroke by diffusion‐weighted magnetic resonance imaging correlate with clinical outcome
TLDR
Evidence that lesion volumes determined by diffusion‐weighted imaging acutely may be predictive of clinical severity and outcome is provided, and a role for diffusion‐ Weighted imaging in the assessment of acute stroke therapies in clinical trials is supported.
Susceptibility contrast imaging of cerebral blood volume: Human experience
TLDR
This report focuses on recent applications of MR‐based crebral blood volume (CBV) imaging in humans and uses high‐speed “single‐shot” or echo planar imaging techniques, which provide the necessary temporal resolution for maping the rapid cerebral transit of contrast agents.
Cerebral blood volume maps of gliomas: comparison with tumor grade and histologic findings.
TLDR
MR CBV maps provided diagnostic information not available with conventional MR imaging in six cases and offers a functional parameter for assessing glioma grade and regions of focal activity.
A model to predict the histopathology of human stroke using diffusion and T2-weighted magnetic resonance imaging.
TLDR
An MR tissue signature model based on experimentally derived relationships of the apparent diffusion coefficient of water (ADCw) and T2 to ischemic brain tissue histopathology can now be tested for its potential to predict reversible and identify irreversible cellular damage in human isChemic brain regions.
Pitfalls in MR measurement of tissue blood flow with intravascular tracers: Which mean transit time?
TLDR
It is demonstrated that mean transit time (MTT), which relates tissue blood volume to blood flow via the Central Volume Principle, is not the first moment of the concentration‐time curve for MR or CT imaging of purely intravascular tracers.
...
1
2
3
...