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New ways of imaging Stroke/TIA Dr Suzanne O’Leary Neuroradiology SpR Frenchay Hospital
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Cerebrovascular disease TIA- warning, deal with it now! Stroke- salvage as much as possible
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TIA A transient episode of neurological dysfunction caused by focal brain, spinal cord, or retinal ischemia, without acute infarction Definition and evaluation of transient ischemic attack: a scientific statement for healthcare professionals from the American Heart Association/American Stroke Association Stroke Council; Council on Cardiovascular Surgery and Anesthesia; Council on Cardiovascular Radiology and Intervention; Council on Cardiovascular Nursing; and the Interdisciplinary Council on Peripheral Vascular Disease. The American Academy of Neurology affirms the value of this statement as an educational tool for neurologists. Stroke. 2009;40(6):2276-93.
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TIA 50% of TIA patients have new small ischaemic lesions on DWI Risk of major stroke in the following 3 /12 First week highest risk.
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TIA imaging MRI Brain +DWI Contrast enhanced MRA neck vessels+ COW.
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CTP in TIA Increased MTT, but not greater than 145% Increased CBV Reduced CBF
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Treatment options TIA- risk factors- statins, antihypertensives, anti-platlet endarterectomy/carotid stenting
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Stroke CT CTA aortic arch- vertex CT perfusion
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CT Non contrast CT head Exclude a contraindication to IV thrombolysis Early changes of infarct
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CTA CTA- arch to Vertex Carotid stenosis Dissections Occluded vessel ? suitable for IA thrombectomy
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CT perfusion Capillary level blood flow 35-45 mls IV contrast with a power injector. Rate 7mls/sec Saline chaser 20-40mls High concentration contrast. 350- 370g/dL iodine
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CT perfusion- Image acquistion Few seconds after injection 80 kv,150 mas 64 slice MDCT- 4cm slab Parallel and superior to the orbital roof- ACA, MCA, PCA. One image per second for 40 seconds.
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CT perfusion “Core” “Ischaemic Penumbra”
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CT Perfusion Cerebral blood flow-CBF Cerebral blood volume-CBV Mean Transit time-MTT
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Cerebral blood volume CBV- total volume of blood in a given unit volume of the brain. Blood in the tissue as well as vessels Units - milliliters of blood per 100g of brain tissue Gray matter-4ml/100gm White matter- 2ml/100gm “Core”- CBV decreased as no autoregulation. “Ischaemic penumbra”- CBV increases to auotreg compensate for the reduced flow
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Cerebral blood flow-CBF Volume of blood moving through a given unit volume of brain per unit time. mL of blood per 100g of brain tissue per minute, mL/100g/min Decreases in the “ischaemic penumbra”- Gray matter- 60 mL/100gm/min White matter- 25 mL/100gm/min
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CBF CBF <10-15ml/100g/min for 2-20 mins- irreversible damage-core. CBF < 20ml/100g/min- neurological deficit which may be reversible. Margin of brain tissue maintained by collaterals at 10-20ml/100g/min- ischaemic penumbra, not neurologically functional but not irreversibly damaged- hours. Treatment directed here.
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Mean Transit Time- MTT Average of the transit time of blood through a given brain region Seconds Gray matter- 4 White matter- 4 Extended in the ischaemic penumbra. MTT=CBV/CBF
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Time to Peak- TTP TTP extended in the core and the ischaemic penumbra. Affected by stenosis
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Mismatch Core- CBV lesion volume Ischaemic penumbra- MTT or CBF lesion volume Mismatch -difference between the two.
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Summary CBFCBVMTT Autoregulation N++ Ischaemia -+++ Irreversibl e damage ----/+
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Penumbra- CBF down CBV up MTT up Penumbra- CBF down CBV up MTT up
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CTP- False positive Severe extracranial carotid stenosis/occlusion Delayed intracranial flow due to AF or low ejection fraction
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65 yrs. L hemiparesis. NIHSS- 17
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CBF CBV MTT
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IA thrombectomy
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CTP post treatment
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Clinical outcome Fully independent. Self discharged that night, bored in hospital!
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42 yrs old. Marfans. On warfarin. Previous CVA.
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CTA
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CTP
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IA thrombectomy
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CT post treatment
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Clinical outcome Fully independent Back at work.
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69yrs. L Hemi paresis. NIHSS 23
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CTA
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CBF CBV MTT
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Post IV thrombolysis
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MRI- DWI Alterations in the motion of water molecules- Brownian motion. 30 mins of onset of stroke Rare cases of false negative
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MRI+DWI b1000 images ADC map Restricted diffusion -not irreversible
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DWI-Stroke Hyperintensity on DWI- cytotoxic oedema
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ADC map Low signal on the ADC map. Tells true restricted diffusion rather than T2 shine through(subacute/chronic infarction)
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Restricted diffusion Abscess- bacterial, some fungal Epidermoid, lymphoma, medulloblastoma Acute demyelination Acute encephalitis Haemorrhage- oxyhaem, extracellular haem DAI CJD
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Syndrome with reversible deficit but may have restricted diffusion Global ischaemia Hypoglycaemia Hemiplegic migraine Seizures TIA
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ADC reversibility TIA in which the imaging is performed within 4 hours Reduced ADC in the ischaemic penumbra indicates hypoperfused tissue. This may revert after thrombolytic therapy.
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Reversibility
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Summary Hyper acute stroke- CT, CTA TIA- medical emergency- MR+ DWI+CEMRA,(CTA)
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