Journal of the American Heart Association: Cardiovascular and Cerebrovascular Disease (Nov 2019)

Incremental Value of Computed Tomography Perfusion for Final Infarct Prediction in Acute Ischemic Cerebellar Stroke

  • Matthias P. Fabritius,
  • Paul Reidler,
  • Matthias F. Froelich,
  • Lukas T. Rotkopf,
  • Thomas Liebig,
  • Lars Kellert,
  • Katharina Feil,
  • Steffen Tiedt,
  • Philipp M. Kazmierczak,
  • Kolja M. Thierfelder,
  • Daniel Puhr‐Westerheide,
  • Wolfgang G. Kunz

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1161/JAHA.119.013069
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 21

Abstract

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Background The diagnosis of ischemic cerebellar stroke is challenging because of nonspecific symptoms and very limited accuracy of commonly applied computed tomography (CT) imaging. Advances in CT perfusion imaging provide increasing value in the detection of posterior circulation stroke, but the prognostic value remains unclear. We aimed to identify imaging parameters that predict morphologic outcome in cerebellar stroke patients using advanced CT including whole‐brain CT perfusion (WB‐CTP). Methods and Results We selected all subjects with cerebellar WB‐CTP perfusion deficits and follow‐up‐confirmed cerebellar infarction from a consecutive cohort with suspected stroke who underwent WB‐CTP. Posterior‐circulation‐Acute‐Stroke‐Prognosis‐Early‐CT‐Score (pc‐ASPECTS) was determined on noncontrast CT, CT angiography source images, and on parametric WB‐CTP maps. Cerebellar perfusion deficit volumes on all maps and the final infarction volume on follow‐up imaging were quantified. Uni‐ and multivariate regression analyses were performed. Sixty patients fulfilled the inclusion criteria. pc‐ASPECTS on CT angiography source images (ß, −9.239; 95% CI, −14.220 to −4.259; P0.05). Conclusions In contrast to noncontrast CT and CT angiography, WB‐CTP imaging contains prognostic information for morphologic outcome in patients with acute cerebellar stroke.

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