Stroke, Vol 23, 686-692, Copyright © 1992 by American Heart Association
Y Terayama, JS Meyer, J Kawamura, S Weathers and KF Mortel
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSES: No reports are available that compare local
cerebral perfusion among groups of patients suffering from multiple
cerebral infarctions with and without cognitive impairments. The present
study was designed to correlate changes in regional cerebral perfusion that
may lead to dementia among patients with multiple cerebral infarctions by
comparing measurements of local cerebral blood flow. METHODS: Local
perfusion was measured using xenon-contrasted computed tomographic scanning
among two groups of patients who had suffered from multiple cerebral
infarctions: Group D (n = 12) were demented and had severe cognitive
impairments, and group I (n = 11) were cognitively intact. Results were
compared with similar measurements among neurologically and cognitively
normal, age-matched volunteers (group N, n = 16). RESULTS: Mean local
perfusion values were reduced among both groups with cerebral infarctions
but to a more marked degree in group D (p less than 0.05). Perfusion of
cerebral white matter was diffusely and severely reduced in group D (p less
than 0.05) but was mildly reduced only in frontal and capsular white matter
in group I (p less than 0.05). Perfusion of cerebral cortex was reduced in
frontal (p less than 0.01) and temporal (p less than 0.01) regions among
both groups but to a significantly greater degree in group D subjects
(frontal, p less than 0.05; temporal, p less than 0.01), who also showed
hypoperfusion of the occipital cortex (p less than 0.05), apparently
because of underlying leukoaraiosis and cortical disconnections. Perfusion
of the basal ganglia was reduced to the same degree among both groups of
stroke patients (p less than 0.01). CONCLUSIONS: Leukoaraiosis with white
matter hypoperfusion appears to be an important determinant for cognitive
impairments among patients with multiple cerebral infarctions.
ARTICLES
Patterns of cerebral hypoperfusion compared among demented and nondemented patients with stroke
Department of Radiology, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, Tex.
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