Stroke, Vol 16, 1010-1015, Copyright © 1985 by American Heart Association
RA Fox, NW Knuckey, RF Fleay, BA Stokes, A Van der Schaaf and I Surveyor
A modified collimator and standard gamma camera have been used to measure
regional cerebral blood flow following inhalation of radioactive xenon. The
collimator and a simplified analysis technique enables excellent
statistical accuracy to be achieved with acceptable precision in the
measurement of grey matter blood flow. The validity of the analysis was
supported by computer modelling and patient measurements. Sixty-one
patients with subarachnoid haemorrhage, cerebrovascular disease or dementia
were retested to determine the reproducibility of our method. The measured
coefficient of variation was 6.5%. Of forty-six patients who had a proven
subarachnoid haemorrhage, 15 subsequently developed cerebral ischaemia.
These showed a CBF of 42 +/- 6 ml X minute-1 X 100 g brain-1 compared with
49 +/- 11 ml X minute-1 X 100 g brain-1 for the remainder. There is
evidence that decreasing blood flow and low initial flow correlate with the
subsequent onset of cerebral ischaemia.
ARTICLES
Regional cerebral blood flow utilizing the gamma camera and xenon inhalation: reproducibility and clinical applications
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