학술논문

Elevated brain oxygen extraction fraction measured by MRI susceptibility relates to perfusion status in acute ischemic stroke
Document Type
article
Source
Cerebrovascular and Brain Metabolism Reviews. 40(3)
Subject
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences
Oncology and Carcinogenesis
Stroke
Neurosciences
Biomedical Imaging
Brain Disorders
Clinical Research
Aged
Aged
80 and over
Disease Susceptibility
Female
Humans
Hypoxia
Brain
Longitudinal Studies
Magnetic Resonance Imaging
Male
Middle Aged
Oxygen
Perfusion
Acute ischemic stroke
MRI
oxygen extraction fraction
quantitative susceptibility mapping
penumbra
Cardiorespiratory Medicine and Haematology
Clinical Sciences
Neurology & Neurosurgery
Clinical sciences
Language
Abstract
Recent clinical trials of new revascularization therapies in acute ischemic stroke have highlighted the importance of physiological imaging to identify optimal treatments for patients. Oxygen extraction fraction (OEF) is a hallmark of at-risk tissue in stroke, and can be quantified from the susceptibility effect of deoxyhemoglobin molecules in venous blood on MRI phase scans. We measured OEF within cerebral veins using advanced quantitative susceptibility mapping (QSM) MRI reconstructions in 20 acute stroke patients. Absolute OEF was elevated in the affected (29.3 ± 3.4%) versus the contralateral hemisphere (25.5 ± 3.1%) of patients with large diffusion-perfusion lesion mismatch (P = 0.032). In these patients, OEF negatively correlated with relative CBF measured by dynamic susceptibility contrast MRI (P = 0.004), suggesting compensation for reduced flow. Patients with perfusion-diffusion match or no hypo-perfusion showed less OEF difference between hemispheres. Nine patients received longitudinal assessment and showed OEF ratio (affected to contralateral) of 1.2 ± 0.1 at baseline that normalized (decreased) to 1.0 ± 0.1 at follow-up three days later (P = 0.03). Our feasibility study demonstrates that QSM MRI can non-invasively quantify OEF in stroke patients, relates to perfusion status, and is sensitive to OEF changes over time. Clinical trial registration: Longitudinal MRI examinations of patients with brain ischemia and blood brain barrier permeability; clinicaltrials.org : NCT02077582.