Stroke, Vol 13, 774-784, Copyright © 1982 by American Heart Association
JS Meyer, S Nakajima, T Okabe, T Amano, R Centeno, YY Len, J Levine, R Levinthal and J Rose
Regional cerebral blood flow and vasomotor reactivity were measured in 33
patients with surgically remediable hemispheric ischemia by the 133Xe
inhalation method prior to superficial temporal to middle cerebral artery
(STA-MCA) by-pass. Thirteen patients also underwent LCBF and L lambda
measurements by the stable xenon CT method for comparison. Twenty-four had
proximal occlusion of one or both internal carotid arteries, 9 had
intracranial occlusive disease (4 internal carotid, 5 middle cerebral).
Measurements were repeated at intervals up to 30 months following surgery
and compared to measurements in a similar group (N = 13) treated medically.
In the surgically treated group 22 patients had recurrent TIAs, of whom 12
also had minor residual neurological deficits from recent small cerebral
infarctions with potential for recovery (RINDs) while the remaining 11 had
RINDs without TIAs. After surgery 28 improved with cessation of TIAs and/or
neurological recovery, 3 remained unchanged, 2 cases worsened. Compared to
age-matched normal hemispheric F1 (gray matter) values, pre- operative F1
values in the STA-MCA group were reduced in both ischemic and opposite
hemispheres. Ischemic regions showed imparied vasomotor reactivity to 5%
CO2 or 100% O2 inhalation. After surgery, mean hemispheric F1 values
increased + 12.8% on the by-pass side and + 10.5% on the contralateral
side. Mean F1 increases reached a maximum 3 months after by-pass, most
evident in ipsilateral frontal regions (+ 24.2%). Vasomotor reactivity did
not significantly improve. Medically treated cases did not show similar F1
increases. Thirteen with carotid occlusive disease (8 with TIAs, 5 with
small recent infarcts) underwent CT LCBF and L lambda measurements before
and after STA-MCA by-pass. Cases with recent infarcts showed reduced LCBF
and L lambda values which increased significantly after STA-MCA by-pass,
however the total group operated upon showed only trends for CBF increases,
probably due to large standard deviations encountered in serial
measurements.
ARTICLES
Redistribution of cerebral blood flow following STA-MCA by-pass in patients with hemispheric ischemia
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