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New ways of imaging Stroke/TIA Dr Suzanne O’Leary Neuroradiology SpR Frenchay Hospital.

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Presentation on theme: "New ways of imaging Stroke/TIA Dr Suzanne O’Leary Neuroradiology SpR Frenchay Hospital."— Presentation transcript:

1 New ways of imaging Stroke/TIA Dr Suzanne O’Leary Neuroradiology SpR Frenchay Hospital

2 Cerebrovascular disease TIA- warning, deal with it now! Stroke- salvage as much as possible

3 TIA A transient episode of neurological dysfunction caused by focal brain, spinal cord, or retinal ischemia, without acute infarction Definition and evaluation of transient ischemic attack: a scientific statement for healthcare professionals from the American Heart Association/American Stroke Association Stroke Council; Council on Cardiovascular Surgery and Anesthesia; Council on Cardiovascular Radiology and Intervention; Council on Cardiovascular Nursing; and the Interdisciplinary Council on Peripheral Vascular Disease. The American Academy of Neurology affirms the value of this statement as an educational tool for neurologists. Stroke. 2009;40(6):2276-93.

4 TIA 50% of TIA patients have new small ischaemic lesions on DWI Risk of major stroke in the following 3 /12 First week highest risk.

5 TIA imaging MRI Brain +DWI Contrast enhanced MRA neck vessels+ COW.

6 CTP in TIA Increased MTT, but not greater than 145% Increased CBV Reduced CBF

7 Treatment options TIA- risk factors- statins, antihypertensives, anti-platlet endarterectomy/carotid stenting

8 Stroke CT CTA aortic arch- vertex CT perfusion

9 CT Non contrast CT head Exclude a contraindication to IV thrombolysis Early changes of infarct

10 CTA CTA- arch to Vertex Carotid stenosis Dissections Occluded vessel ? suitable for IA thrombectomy

11 CT perfusion Capillary level blood flow 35-45 mls IV contrast with a power injector. Rate 7mls/sec Saline chaser 20-40mls High concentration contrast. 350- 370g/dL iodine

12 CT perfusion- Image acquistion Few seconds after injection 80 kv,150 mas 64 slice MDCT- 4cm slab Parallel and superior to the orbital roof- ACA, MCA, PCA. One image per second for 40 seconds.

13 CT perfusion “Core” “Ischaemic Penumbra”

14 CT Perfusion Cerebral blood flow-CBF Cerebral blood volume-CBV Mean Transit time-MTT

15 Cerebral blood volume CBV- total volume of blood in a given unit volume of the brain. Blood in the tissue as well as vessels Units - milliliters of blood per 100g of brain tissue Gray matter-4ml/100gm White matter- 2ml/100gm “Core”- CBV decreased as no autoregulation. “Ischaemic penumbra”- CBV increases to auotreg compensate for the reduced flow

16 Cerebral blood flow-CBF Volume of blood moving through a given unit volume of brain per unit time. mL of blood per 100g of brain tissue per minute, mL/100g/min Decreases in the “ischaemic penumbra”- Gray matter- 60 mL/100gm/min White matter- 25 mL/100gm/min

17 CBF CBF <10-15ml/100g/min for 2-20 mins- irreversible damage-core. CBF < 20ml/100g/min- neurological deficit which may be reversible. Margin of brain tissue maintained by collaterals at 10-20ml/100g/min- ischaemic penumbra, not neurologically functional but not irreversibly damaged- hours. Treatment directed here.

18 Mean Transit Time- MTT Average of the transit time of blood through a given brain region Seconds Gray matter- 4 White matter- 4 Extended in the ischaemic penumbra. MTT=CBV/CBF

19 Time to Peak- TTP TTP extended in the core and the ischaemic penumbra. Affected by stenosis

20 Mismatch Core- CBV lesion volume Ischaemic penumbra- MTT or CBF lesion volume Mismatch -difference between the two.

21 Summary CBFCBVMTT Autoregulation N++ Ischaemia -+++ Irreversibl e damage ----/+

22 Penumbra- CBF down CBV up MTT up Penumbra- CBF down CBV up MTT up

23 CTP- False positive Severe extracranial carotid stenosis/occlusion Delayed intracranial flow due to AF or low ejection fraction

24 65 yrs. L hemiparesis. NIHSS- 17

25 CBF CBV MTT

26 IA thrombectomy

27 CTP post treatment

28 Clinical outcome Fully independent. Self discharged that night, bored in hospital!

29 42 yrs old. Marfans. On warfarin. Previous CVA.

30 CTA

31 CTP

32 IA thrombectomy

33 CT post treatment

34 Clinical outcome Fully independent Back at work.

35 69yrs. L Hemi paresis. NIHSS 23

36 CTA

37 CBF CBV MTT

38 Post IV thrombolysis

39 MRI- DWI Alterations in the motion of water molecules- Brownian motion. 30 mins of onset of stroke Rare cases of false negative

40 MRI+DWI b1000 images ADC map Restricted diffusion -not irreversible

41 DWI-Stroke Hyperintensity on DWI- cytotoxic oedema

42 ADC map Low signal on the ADC map. Tells true restricted diffusion rather than T2 shine through(subacute/chronic infarction)

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47 Restricted diffusion Abscess- bacterial, some fungal Epidermoid, lymphoma, medulloblastoma Acute demyelination Acute encephalitis Haemorrhage- oxyhaem, extracellular haem DAI CJD

48 Syndrome with reversible deficit but may have restricted diffusion Global ischaemia Hypoglycaemia Hemiplegic migraine Seizures TIA

49 ADC reversibility TIA in which the imaging is performed within 4 hours Reduced ADC in the ischaemic penumbra indicates hypoperfused tissue. This may revert after thrombolytic therapy.

50 Reversibility

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52 Summary Hyper acute stroke- CT, CTA TIA- medical emergency- MR+ DWI+CEMRA,(CTA)


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