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on June 9, 2005

Stroke. 2005
Published online before print June 9, 2005, doi: 10.1161/01.STR.0000170709.95185.b1
A more recent version of this article appeared on July 1, 2005
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Submitted on February 18, 2005
Revised on April 10, 2005
Accepted on April 26, 2005

Prediction of the Clinical Outcome of Pediatric Moyamoya Disease With Postoperative Basal/Acetazolamide Stress Brain Perfusion SPECT After Revascularization Surgery

Young So MD; Ho-Young Lee MD; Seung-Ki Kim MD; Jae Sung Lee PhD; Kyu-Chang Wang MD; Byung-Kyu Cho MD; Eunjoo Kang PhD; and Dong Soo Lee MD*

From the Departments of Nuclear Medicine (Y.S., H.-Y.L., J.S.L., E.K., D.S.L.) and Neurosurgery (S.-K.K., K.-C.W., B.-K.C.), Seoul National University College of Medicine, Korea; and the Department of Nuclear Medicine, Konkuk University, College of Medicine (Y.S.), Seoul, Korea.

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: dsl{at}plaza.snu.ac.kr.

Background and Purpose--We evaluated whether basal/acetazolamide stress brain perfusion SPECT performed after revascularization surgery can predict the further clinical outcome of patients with pediatric moyamoya disease.

Methods--A total of 77 (31 males, 46 females, age 6.6±3.2 years) patients with postoperative pediatric moyamoya disease who underwent basal/acetazolamide stress brain perfusion SPECT 6 to 12 months after revascularization surgery and who were followed-up >12 months after SPECT were included. Mean follow-up period after SPECT was 36±19 months. Sixty-two patients underwent bilateral ribbon encephaloduroarteriosynangiosis (EDAS), 14 bilateral EDAS, and 1 unilateral EDAS. Ordinal logistic regression analysis using 5 independent variables (infarction on preoperative MRI, age at the first operation, highest Suzuki stage on cerebral angiography, and regional cerebrovascular reserve on postoperative SPECT) against postoperative clinical outcomes was performed.

Results--Fifty-one patients had preserved reserve on postoperative SPECT and their clinical outcomes were excellent (30), good (15), fair (4), and poor (2); 26 patients had decreased reserve (excellent, 1; good, 7; fair, 14; poor, 4). On ordinal logistic regression analysis, age at the first operation (P=0.033) and reserve on postoperative SPECT (P<0.001) were statistically significant.

Conclusion--Basal/acetazolamide stress brain perfusion SPECT performed at 6 to 12 months after the indirect bypass operation could predict the further clinical outcome of pediatric patients with moyamoya disease. Patients with decreased cerebrovascular reserve will have remaining neurological deficit and ischemic attacks on follow-up.


Key words: cerebral revascularization • moyamoya disease • outcome • tomography, emission, computed




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