학술논문
Impact of eloquent motor cortex-tissue reperfusion beyond the traditional thrombolysis in cerebral infarction (TICI) scoring after thrombectomy
Document Type
article
Author
Raychev, Radoslav; Saber, Hamidreza; Saver, Jeffrey L; Hinman, Jason D; Brown, Scott; Vinuela, Fernando; Duckwiler, Gary; Jahan, Reza; Tateshima, Satoshi; Szeder, Viktor; Nour, May; Colby, Geoffrey P; Restrepo, Lucas; Kim, Doojin; Bahr-Hosseini, Mersedeh; Ali, Latisha; Starkman, Sidney; Rao, Neal; Nogueira, Raul G; Liebeskind, David
Source
Journal of NeuroInterventional Surgery. 13(11)
Subject
Language
Abstract
BackgroundTargeted eloquence-based tissue reperfusion within the primary motor cortex may have a differential effect on disability as compared with traditional volume-based (thrombolysis in cerebral infarction, TICI) reperfusion after endovascular thrombectomy (EVT) in the setting of acute ischemic stroke (AIS).MethodsWe explored the impact of eloquent reperfusion (ER) within primary motor cortex (PMC) on clinical outcome (modified Rankin Scale, mRS) in AIS patients undergoing EVT. ER-PMC was defined as presence of flow on final digital subtraction angiography (DSA) within four main cortical branches, supplying the PMC (middle cerebral artery (MCA) - precentral, central, postcentral; anterior cerebral artery (ACA) - medial frontal branch arising from callosomarginal or pericallosal arteries) and graded as absent (0), partial (1), and complete (2). Prospectively collected data from two centers were analyzed. Multivariate analysis was conducted to assess the impact of ER-PMC on 90-day disability (mRS) among patients with anterior circulation occlusion who achieved partial reperfusion (TICI 2a and 2b).ResultsAmong the 125 patients who met the study criteria, ER-PMC distribution was: absent (0) in 19/125 (15.2%); partial (1) in 52/125 (41.6%), and complete (2) in 54/125 (43.2%). TICI 2b was achieved in 102/125 (81.6%) and ER-PMC was substantially higher in those patients (P