Stroke, Vol 20, 890-898, Copyright © 1989 by American Heart Association
JL Tyler, R Leblanc, E Meyer, A Dagher, YL Yamamoto, M Diksic and A Hakim
Seventeen patients with an intracranial arteriovenous malformation were
studied with positron emission tomography. Cerebral blood flow, cerebral
blood volume, oxygen extraction fraction, and glucose and oxygen metabolism
were evaluated in both hemispheres, excluding the area of the malformation
itself. Patients were divided into three groups according to the size of
their malformation, and results obtained were compared with studies in
healthy volunteers. The glucose metabolism was significantly (p less than
0.01) decreased in the ipsilateral hemisphere in all patients. The cerebral
blood volume was significantly increased (p less than 0.001) ipsilaterally
in the three groups, and contralaterally in patients with medium- and
large-sized arteriovenous malformations. The cerebral blood volume to
cerebral blood flow ration, an index of vascular mean transit time, was
significantly increased (p less than 0.005) ipsilaterally in patients with
medium- and large-sized malformations and contralaterally in patients with
large ones. Cerebral blood flow, oxygen extraction fraction, and oxygen
metabolism were within the normal range bilaterally in all three groups,
but oxygen extraction fraction tended to be higher in patients with larger
lesions. The lack of significant change in oxygen metabolism suggests that
oxygen metabolism in cortical areas remote from the arteriovenous
malformation has been maintained by compensatory hemodynamic mechanisms.
These data reveal widespread metabolic and hemodynamic consequences of
arteriovenous malformations and suggest that they are associated with
impairment of glucose metabolism, both in ipsilateral regions remote from
the lesion and in the contralateral hemisphere in patients with large
lesions.
ARTICLES
Hemodynamic and metabolic effects of cerebral arteriovenous malformations studied by positron emission tomography
Department of Neurology and Neurosurgery, Montreal Neurological Hospital and Institute, McGill University, Montreal, Canada.
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B. Meyer, C. Schaller, C. Frenkel, B. Ebeling, and J. Schramm Distributions of Local Oxygen Saturation and Its Response to Changes of Mean Arterial Blood Pressure in the Cerebral Cortex Adjacent to Arteriovenous Malformations Stroke, December 1, 1999; 30(12): 2623 - 2630. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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