scholarly journals P.135 Willisian collateral and cervical carotid stenosis during large vessel occlusion stroke: Observations from computed tomography angiography

Author(s):  
R Kiwan ◽  
S Lownie

Background: The circle of Willis (CoW) and cervical carotid arteries are important sources of collateral flow during acute large vessel occlusion (LVO) in the anterior circulation. We examined the anatomical components of the circle and the cervical carotid arteries to determine relationship to acute stroke severity. Methods: Consecutive patients with acute LVO who underwent EVT were assessed. Measurements were made of the luminal diameters of 16 anatomical vascular components. Admission NIHSS, ASPECTS and mCTA collateral scores were statistically analyzed for any relationship to vascular measurements. Results: 100 patients were studied. No relationship was found between the collateral Willisian pathways and measures of stroke severity. However, the ophthalmic arteries exhibited a relationship to stroke severity. In adjusted analysis, 1-mm increases in the ipsilateral and contralateral ophthalmic artery diameter were independently associated with a 4.80-point decrease and a 6.31-point increase in the NIHSS scale, respectively. Similarly, a 1.53-point increase and a 2.62-point decrease in the ASPECTS. In the neck a majority showed 0-55% stenosis, with no stenosis between 55% and 95%, and 14% at 95% to 100%. Conclusions: Stroke severity and collateral during LVO is unrelated to Willisian collateral. Ophthalmic artery calibers are related. Acute progression of 55-95% stenoses to complete occlusion occurs in LVO stroke

Stroke ◽  
2017 ◽  
Vol 48 (suppl_1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Muhammad H Niazi ◽  
Mohammad El-Ghanem ◽  
Alicia Richardson ◽  
Kathy Morrison ◽  
Reichwein Raymond ◽  
...  

Background: In 2015 guidelines regarding endovascular treatment (ET) of Large Vessel Occlusion (LVO) in acute ischemic stroke (AIS) were changed, leading to more patients being transferred to comprehensive stroke centers (CSC) for ET in selected patients, sometimes bypassing primary stroke centers. In the era of ET, there is a need for a simple yet sensitive pre-hospital tool to triage appropriate patients to CSCs. Many prehospital stroke scales predicting LVO are not in widespread clinical use because they are complex and not reliable. A recently published Denmark study demonstrated the PASS tool (Score range 0-3) for detecting LVO where a score of ≥2 was considered to be optimal in predicting LVO with sensitivity of 0.66. Methods: A retrospective analysis of AIS patients with confirmed anterior circulation LVO by catheter-based cerebral angiography between January 2015 and June 2016 was conducted. PASS scores were calculated and correlated with NIHSS to assess for severity of the stroke. Results: Fifty-four patients received ET during the study period. Those who had posterior circulation LVO were excluded, leaving 44 patients for final analysis. Only 5 (11.4%) patients had PASS score of <2 while 39 patients (88.6 %) had a score of ≥2 showing sensitivity of 0.89 for those patients with LVO. Average NIHSS scores were 11 (95% CI 6.6-15) for PASS <2 and 20 (95% CI 18.5-22.5) for PASS ≥2 (p value 0.005). Conclusion: The PASS tool is simple, quick, and easy to perform and has high sensitivity in AIS patients with LVO. To assess its value and efficacy in real time it should be implemented into EMS systems and be performed in the pre-hospital setting.


Stroke ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 52 (Suppl_1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Tetsuya Hashimoto ◽  
Takenobu Kunieda ◽  
Tristan Honda ◽  
Fabien Scalzo ◽  
Latisha K Sharma ◽  
...  

Background and Purpose: Acute leptomeningeal collateral flow is vital to maintain blood perfusion to penumbral tissue in acute ischemic stroke due to large vessel occlusion (LVO). However, the degree of this collateral flow differs among patients. Patient premorbid factors as well as factors caused by the mechanisms of stroke are expected to be associated with this collateral flow. We aimed to investigate the clinical determinants of acute leptomeningeal collateral flow in embolic LVO. Methods: Among consecutive stroke patients caused by acute embolic anterior circulation LVO, we retrospectively reviewed 108 patients who underwent evaluation of acute leptomeningeal collateral status (CS) on pretreatment CTA admitted from January 2015 to December 2019. Both premorbid information including cerebrovascular risk factors and leukoaraiosis evaluated by the total white matter (WM) Fazekas score on MRI, which was calculated as periventricular plus deep WM scores, and stroke related information including stroke subtypes, severity, time course, and occlusive thrombus characteristics were collected. Among thrombus characteristics, thrombus length was measured by tracing the filling defect of contrast on CTA. The clinical determinants of good leptomeningeal CS (> 50% collateral filling of the occluded territory) were analyzed. Results: CS was good in 67 patients (62%). On multivariate logistic regression analysis, cardioembolic stroke subtype was negatively related (OR, 0.170; 95% CI, 0.022-0.868), and mild leukoaraiosis (total WM Fazekas scores of 0-2) was positively related (OR, 9.57; 95% CI, 2.49-47.75) to good CS. On subgroup analysis limited to 82 patients with cardioembolic stroke, shorter thrombus length (OR, 0.913 per mm increase; 95% CI, 0.819-0.999) as well as mild leukoaraiosis (OR, 5.79; 95% CI, 1.40-29.61) were independently related to good CS. Conclusions: Premorbid leukoaraiosis and cardioembolic etiology are determinants of acute leptomeningeal collateral flow in embolic LVO. In addition, thrombus length is also a determinant of collateral flow in cardioembolic LVO. These findings indicate that a combination of chronic cerebrovascular damage and acute embolic mechanisms could determine the degree of leptomeningeal collateral flow.


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xiaoli Si ◽  
Yuanjian Fang ◽  
Wenqing Xia ◽  
Tianwen Chen ◽  
Huan Huang ◽  
...  

Abstract Background and Purpose - To date, identifying emergent large vessel occlusion (ELVO) patients in the prehospital stage is important but still challenging. We aimed to retrospectively validate a simple prehospital stroke scale——Prehospital Acute Stroke Severity (PASS) scale to identify ELVO. Methods - We retrospectively evaluated our consecutive cohort of acute ischemic stroke (AIS) who underwent CT angiography (CTA), MR angiography (MRA) or digital subtraction angiography (DSA). PASS scale was calculated based on National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale (NIHSS) items retrospectively. The comparison of diagnostic parameters between PASS scale and NIHSS scale were performed. Results - Finally, a total of 605 patients were enrolled. ELVO patients with PASS≥2 had a median NIHSS score of 14. The best predictive value of PASS≥2 showed a similar predictive value compared with NIHSS≥9. Cortical symptoms such as consciousness disorder and gaze palsy were more specific indicators for ELVO than motor deficits. Consciousness disorder was more serious in posterior circulation infarct (PIC) while gaze palsy was more common in anterior circulation infarct (AIC). Conclusions - PASS scale had both good discrimination and calibration in our retrospective cohort. It could reflect acute stroke severity well and predict ELVO in an effective and simple way. Moreover, cortical symptoms had high specificities to predict ELVO on their own.


Stroke ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 51 (Suppl_1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Pierre Seners ◽  
Pauline Roca ◽  
Laurence Legrand ◽  
Guillaume Turc ◽  
Catherine Oppenheim ◽  
...  

Introduction: Retrograde collateral flow is critical to maintain tissue perfusion despite large vessel occlusion. However, the premorbid factors associated with good collateral flow remain unclear, with substantial discrepancies in the literature. Methods: Patients from the registries of 6 French stroke centres with the following criteria were included: (1) acute stroke with isolated M1 occlusion ( i.e , without tandem occlusion) referred for thrombectomy between May 2015 and March 2017; and (2) baseline brain MRI, including diffusion weighted imaging, MR-angiography and dynamic susceptibility-contrast perfusion-weighted imaging (PWI). A collateral flow map derived from PWI source data was automatically generated, replicating Kim et al’s previously validated method (Ann. Neurol., 2014). Collateral flow was dichotomized into good and poor. The association between good collateral flow and baseline clinical, biological and radiological variables was studied. Results: One hundred and sixteen patients were included, of which 66 (57%) had good collaterals. As expected, the latter patients had lower admission NIHSS (median: 15 vs . 18, P=0.005) and lower baseline DWI lesion volume (median: 7ml vs . 32ml, P<0.001) than patient with poor collaterals. Onset-to-imaging delay and M1 occlusion site (proximal vs . distal) were similar in both groups (123min vs . 118min, P=0.75; 70% vs. 68%, P=0.85, respectively). There was no significant (P>0.05) difference in gender, age, history of hypertension or diabetes, current smoking, baseline blood glucose and use of statins or antiplatelets between the good and poor collaterals groups. Conclusions: Despite the expected association between PWI-derived collateral flow and baseline clinical and radiological stroke severity in our sample of acute M1 occlusions, there was no association with premorbid factors previously found associated in some -but not all- studies. Our findings suggest that collateral flow is predominantly explained by genetic factors.


2020 ◽  
Vol 12 (10) ◽  
pp. 942-945 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ian Mark ◽  
Seyed Mohammad Seyedsaadat ◽  
John C Benson ◽  
David F Kallmes ◽  
Alejandro A Rabinstein ◽  
...  

BackgroundLeukoaraiosis and collateral blood flow are processes that involve small vessels, the former related to flow within the deep perforating arterioles and the latter involving the small, cortical pial-pial connections, both of which are independently used to predict cerebrovascular events and treatment outcomes. The aim of this study was to investigate their relationship to each other.MethodsWe retrospectively reviewed patients who underwent mechanical thrombectomy for stroke with pre-procedural CT imaging within 24 hours of the onset of symptoms. Leukoaraiosis was graded by the total Fazekas score on non-contrast CT, periventricular white matter (PVWM) and deep white matter (DWM) scores, both ranging from 0 to 3. Collateral cerebral blood flow was measured by the American Society of Interventional and Therapeutic Radiology/Society of Interventional Radiology (ASITN/SIR) collateral scale.Results178 patients were included with a mean age of 67.6±14.8 years. We found an inverse relationship between total Fazekas score and collateral flow (p<0.0001). Among patients with good collaterals, 75.1% had total Fazekas scores of 0–2, compared with 36.6% of patients with moderate collaterals and 32.7% of patients with poor collaterals with total Fazekas scores of 0–2. Mean Fazekas scores were 1.6±1.5, 3.1±1.5 and 3.4±1.6 for good, moderate and poor collaterals, respectively (p<0.0001). On multivariate analysis, total Fazekas score was the only variable independently associated with collateral status (p<0.0001).ConclusionsIncreasing severity of leukoaraiosis is associated with poor collateral grade among ischemic stroke patients with anterior circulation large vessel occlusion. These findings suggest that leukoaraiosis may be a marker for global cerebrovascular dysfunction.


2021 ◽  
pp. neurintsurg-2020-017155
Author(s):  
Alexander M Kollikowski ◽  
Franziska Cattus ◽  
Julia Haag ◽  
Jörn Feick ◽  
Alexander G März ◽  
...  

BackgroundEvidence of the consequences of different prehospital pathways before mechanical thrombectomy (MT) in large vessel occlusion stroke is inconclusive. The aim of this study was to investigate the infarct extent and progression before and after MT in directly admitted (mothership) versus transferred (drip and ship) patients using the Alberta Stroke Program Early CT Score (ASPECTS).MethodsASPECTS of 535 consecutive large vessel occlusion stroke patients eligible for MT between 2015 to 2019 were retrospectively analyzed for differences in the extent of baseline, post-referral, and post-recanalization infarction between the mothership and drip and ship pathways. Time intervals and transport distances of both pathways were analyzed. Multiple linear regression was used to examine the association between infarct progression (baseline to post-recanalization ASPECTS decline), patient characteristics, and logistic key figures.ResultsASPECTS declined during transfer (9 (8–10) vs 7 (6-9), p<0.0001), resulting in lower ASPECTS at stroke center presentation (mothership 9 (7–10) vs drip and ship 7 (6–9), p<0.0001) and on follow-up imaging (mothership 7 (4–8) vs drip and ship 6 (3–7), p=0.001) compared with mothership patients. Infarct progression was significantly higher in transferred patients (points lost, mothership 2 (0–3) vs drip and ship 3 (2–6), p<0.0001). After multivariable adjustment, only interfacility transfer, preinterventional clinical stroke severity, the degree of angiographic recanalization, and the duration of the thrombectomy procedure remained predictors of infarct progression (R2=0.209, p<0.0001).ConclusionsInfarct progression and postinterventional infarct extent, as assessed by ASPECTS, varied between the drip and ship and mothership pathway, leading to more pronounced infarction in transferred patients. ASPECTS may serve as a radiological measure to monitor the benefit or harm of different prehospital pathways for MT.


2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Hai-fei Jiang ◽  
Yi-qun Zhang ◽  
Jiang-xia Pang ◽  
Pei-ning Shao ◽  
Han-cheng Qiu ◽  
...  

AbstractThe prominent vessel sign (PVS) on susceptibility-weighted imaging (SWI) is not displayed in all cases of acute ischemia. We aimed to investigate the factors associated with the presence of PVS in stroke patients. Consecutive ischemic stroke patients admitted within 24 h from symptom onset underwent emergency multimodal MRI at admission. Associated factors for the presence of PVS were analyzed using univariate analyses and multivariable logistic regression analyses. A total of 218 patients were enrolled. The occurrence rate of PVS was 55.5%. Univariate analyses showed significant differences between PVS-positive group and PVS-negative group in age, history of coronary heart disease, baseline NIHSS scores, total cholesterol, hemoglobin, anterior circulation infarct, large vessel occlusion, and cardioembolism. Multivariable logistic regression analyses revealed that the independent factors associated with PVS were anterior circulation infarct (odds ratio [OR] 13.7; 95% confidence interval [CI] 3.5–53.3), large vessel occlusion (OR 123.3; 95% CI 33.7–451.5), and cardioembolism (OR 5.6; 95% CI 2.1–15.3). Anterior circulation infarct, large vessel occlusion, and cardioembolism are independently associated with the presence of PVS on SWI.


2021 ◽  
pp. 1-9
Author(s):  
Jong-Hoon Kim ◽  
Young-Jin Jung ◽  
Chul-Hoon Chang

OBJECTIVEThe optimal treatment for underlying intracranial atherosclerosis (ICAS) in patients with emergent large-vessel occlusion (ELVO) remains unclear. Reocclusion during endovascular treatment (EVT) occurs frequently (57.1%–77.3%) after initial recanalization with stent retriever (SR) thrombectomy in ICAS-related ELVO. This study aimed to compare treatment outcomes of the strategy of first stenting without retrieval (FRESH) using the Solitaire FR versus SR thrombectomy in patients with ICAS-related ELVO.METHODSThe authors retrospectively reviewed consecutive patients with acute ischemic stroke and intracranial ELVO of the anterior circulation who underwent EVT between January 2017 and December 2019 at Yeungnam University Medical Center. Large-vessel occlusion (LVO) of the anterior circulation was classified by etiology as follows: 1) no significant stenosis after recanalization (embolic group) and 2) remnant stenosis > 70% or lesser degree of stenosis with a tendency toward reocclusion and/or flow impairment during EVT (ICAS group). The ICAS group was divided into the SR thrombectomy group (SR thrombectomy) and the FRESH group.RESULTSA total of 105 patients (62 men and 43 women; median age 71 years, IQR 62.5–79 years) were included. The embolic, SR thrombectomy, and FRESH groups comprised 66 (62.9%), 26 (24.7%), and 13 (12.4%) patients, respectively. There were no significant differences between the SR thrombectomy and FRESH groups in symptom onset–to-door time, but puncture-to-recanalization time was significantly shorter in the latter group (39 vs 54 minutes, p = 0.032). There were fewer stent retrieval passes but more first-pass recanalizations in the FRESH group (p < 0.001). Favorable functional outcomes were significantly more frequent in the FRESH group (84.6% vs 42.3%, p = 0.017).CONCLUSIONSThis study’s findings suggest that FRESH, rather than rescue stenting, could be a treatment option for ICAS-related ELVO.


Stroke ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 52 (Suppl_1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Shadi Yaghi ◽  
Eytan Raz ◽  
Seena Dehkharghani ◽  
Howard Riina ◽  
Ryan McTaggart ◽  
...  

Introduction: In patients with acute large vessel occlusion, the definition of penumbral tissue based on T max delay perfusion imaging is not well established in relation to late-window endovascular thrombectomy (EVT). In this study, we sought to evaluate penumbra consumption rates for T max delays in patients treated between 6 and 16 hours from last known normal. Methods: This is a secondary analysis of the DEFUSE-3 trial, which included patients with an acute ischemic stroke due to anterior circulation occlusion within 6-16 hours of last known normal. The primary outcome is percentage penumbra consumption defined as (24 hour infarct volume-core infarct volume)/(Tmax volume-baseline core volume). We stratified the cohort into 4 categories (untreated, TICI 0-2a, TICI 2b, and TICI3) and calculated penumbral consumption rates. Results: We included 143 patients, of which 66 were untreated, 16 had TICI 0-2a, 46 had TICI 2b, and 15 had TICI 3. In untreated patients, a median (IQR) of 48% (21% - 85%) of penumbral tissue was consumed based on Tmax6 as opposed to 160.6% (51% - 455.2%) of penumbral tissue based on Tmax10. On the contrary, in patients achieving TICI 3 reperfusion, a median (IQR) of 5.3% (1.1% - 14.6%) of penumbral tissue was consumed based on Tmax6 and 25.7% (3.2% - 72.1%) of penumbral tissue based on Tmax10. Conclusion: Contrary to prior studies, we show that at least 75% of penumbral tissue with Tmax > 10 sec delay can be salvaged with successful reperfusion and new generation devices. In untreated patients, since infarct expansion can occur beyond 24 hours, future studies with delayed brain imaging are needed to determine the optimal T max delay threshold that defines penumbral tissue in patients with proximal anterior circulation large vessel occlusion.


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