Dynamics of brain perfusion and cognitive performance in revascularization of carotid artery stenosis

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Dynamics of brain perfusion and cognitive performance in revascularization of carotid artery stenosis. / Schröder, Julian; Heinze, Marlene; Günther, Matthias; Cheng, Bastian; Nickel, Alina; Schröder, Tanja; Fischer, Felix; Kessner, Simon S; Magnus, Tim; Fiehler, Jens; Larena-Avellaneda, Axel; Gerloff, Christian; Thomalla, Götz.

in: NEUROIMAGE-CLIN, Jahrgang 22, 13.03.2019, S. 101779.

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@article{a2bd2e44e002491aa16d4df2915deabd,
title = "Dynamics of brain perfusion and cognitive performance in revascularization of carotid artery stenosis",
abstract = "INTRODUCTION: There is evidence suggesting a detrimental effect of asymptomatic carotid artery stenosis on cognitive function even in the absence of ischemic cerebral lesions. Hypoperfusion has been suggested as pathophysiological mechanism causing cognitive impairment. We aimed to assess cognitive performance and cerebral perfusion changes in patients with carotid artery stenosis without ischemic lesions by arterial spin labeling (ASL) and contrast enhanced (CE) perfusion MRI before and after revascularization therapy.METHODS: 17 asymptomatic patients with unilateral high-grade (≥70%) carotid artery stenosis without evidence of structural brain lesions underwent ASL and CE perfusion MRI and cognitive testing (MMSE, DemTect, Clock-Drawing Test, Trail-Making Test, Stroop Test) before and 6-8 weeks after revascularization therapy by endarterectomy or stenting. Multiparametric perfusion maps (ASL: cerebral blood flow (ASL-CBF), bolus arrival time (ASL-BAT); CE: cerebral blood flow (CE-CBF), mean transit time (CE-MTT), cerebral blood volume (CE-CBV)) were calculated and analyzed by vascular territory. Relative perfusion values were calculated.RESULTS: Multivariate analysis revealed a significant impact of revascularization therapy on all perfusion measures analyzed. At baseline post-hoc testing showed significant hypoperfusion in MCA borderzones as assessed by ASL-CBF, ASL-BAT, CE-MTT and CE-CBV. All perfusion alterations normalized after revascularization. We did not observe any significant correlation of cognitive test results with perfusion parameters. There was no significant change in cognitive performance after revascularization.CONCLUSION: We found evidence of traceable perfusion alterations in patients with high grade carotid artery stenosis in the absence of structural brain lesions, which proved fully reversible after revascularization therapy. In this cohort of asymptomatic patients we did not observe an association of hypoperfusion with cognitive performance.",
keywords = "Journal Article",
author = "Julian Schr{\"o}der and Marlene Heinze and Matthias G{\"u}nther and Bastian Cheng and Alina Nickel and Tanja Schr{\"o}der and Felix Fischer and Kessner, {Simon S} and Tim Magnus and Jens Fiehler and Axel Larena-Avellaneda and Christian Gerloff and G{\"o}tz Thomalla",
note = "Copyright {\textcopyright} 2019 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.",
year = "2019",
month = mar,
day = "13",
doi = "10.1016/j.nicl.2019.101779",
language = "English",
volume = "22",
pages = "101779",
journal = "NEUROIMAGE-CLIN",
issn = "2213-1582",
publisher = "Elsevier BV",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Dynamics of brain perfusion and cognitive performance in revascularization of carotid artery stenosis

AU - Schröder, Julian

AU - Heinze, Marlene

AU - Günther, Matthias

AU - Cheng, Bastian

AU - Nickel, Alina

AU - Schröder, Tanja

AU - Fischer, Felix

AU - Kessner, Simon S

AU - Magnus, Tim

AU - Fiehler, Jens

AU - Larena-Avellaneda, Axel

AU - Gerloff, Christian

AU - Thomalla, Götz

N1 - Copyright © 2019 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

PY - 2019/3/13

Y1 - 2019/3/13

N2 - INTRODUCTION: There is evidence suggesting a detrimental effect of asymptomatic carotid artery stenosis on cognitive function even in the absence of ischemic cerebral lesions. Hypoperfusion has been suggested as pathophysiological mechanism causing cognitive impairment. We aimed to assess cognitive performance and cerebral perfusion changes in patients with carotid artery stenosis without ischemic lesions by arterial spin labeling (ASL) and contrast enhanced (CE) perfusion MRI before and after revascularization therapy.METHODS: 17 asymptomatic patients with unilateral high-grade (≥70%) carotid artery stenosis without evidence of structural brain lesions underwent ASL and CE perfusion MRI and cognitive testing (MMSE, DemTect, Clock-Drawing Test, Trail-Making Test, Stroop Test) before and 6-8 weeks after revascularization therapy by endarterectomy or stenting. Multiparametric perfusion maps (ASL: cerebral blood flow (ASL-CBF), bolus arrival time (ASL-BAT); CE: cerebral blood flow (CE-CBF), mean transit time (CE-MTT), cerebral blood volume (CE-CBV)) were calculated and analyzed by vascular territory. Relative perfusion values were calculated.RESULTS: Multivariate analysis revealed a significant impact of revascularization therapy on all perfusion measures analyzed. At baseline post-hoc testing showed significant hypoperfusion in MCA borderzones as assessed by ASL-CBF, ASL-BAT, CE-MTT and CE-CBV. All perfusion alterations normalized after revascularization. We did not observe any significant correlation of cognitive test results with perfusion parameters. There was no significant change in cognitive performance after revascularization.CONCLUSION: We found evidence of traceable perfusion alterations in patients with high grade carotid artery stenosis in the absence of structural brain lesions, which proved fully reversible after revascularization therapy. In this cohort of asymptomatic patients we did not observe an association of hypoperfusion with cognitive performance.

AB - INTRODUCTION: There is evidence suggesting a detrimental effect of asymptomatic carotid artery stenosis on cognitive function even in the absence of ischemic cerebral lesions. Hypoperfusion has been suggested as pathophysiological mechanism causing cognitive impairment. We aimed to assess cognitive performance and cerebral perfusion changes in patients with carotid artery stenosis without ischemic lesions by arterial spin labeling (ASL) and contrast enhanced (CE) perfusion MRI before and after revascularization therapy.METHODS: 17 asymptomatic patients with unilateral high-grade (≥70%) carotid artery stenosis without evidence of structural brain lesions underwent ASL and CE perfusion MRI and cognitive testing (MMSE, DemTect, Clock-Drawing Test, Trail-Making Test, Stroop Test) before and 6-8 weeks after revascularization therapy by endarterectomy or stenting. Multiparametric perfusion maps (ASL: cerebral blood flow (ASL-CBF), bolus arrival time (ASL-BAT); CE: cerebral blood flow (CE-CBF), mean transit time (CE-MTT), cerebral blood volume (CE-CBV)) were calculated and analyzed by vascular territory. Relative perfusion values were calculated.RESULTS: Multivariate analysis revealed a significant impact of revascularization therapy on all perfusion measures analyzed. At baseline post-hoc testing showed significant hypoperfusion in MCA borderzones as assessed by ASL-CBF, ASL-BAT, CE-MTT and CE-CBV. All perfusion alterations normalized after revascularization. We did not observe any significant correlation of cognitive test results with perfusion parameters. There was no significant change in cognitive performance after revascularization.CONCLUSION: We found evidence of traceable perfusion alterations in patients with high grade carotid artery stenosis in the absence of structural brain lesions, which proved fully reversible after revascularization therapy. In this cohort of asymptomatic patients we did not observe an association of hypoperfusion with cognitive performance.

KW - Journal Article

U2 - 10.1016/j.nicl.2019.101779

DO - 10.1016/j.nicl.2019.101779

M3 - SCORING: Journal article

C2 - 30903966

VL - 22

SP - 101779

JO - NEUROIMAGE-CLIN

JF - NEUROIMAGE-CLIN

SN - 2213-1582

ER -