Diagnostics (Apr 2024)

Could Phosphorous MR Spectroscopy Help Predict the Severity of Vasospasm? A Pilot Study

  • Malik Galijasevic,
  • Ruth Steiger,
  • Stephanie Alice Treichl,
  • Wing Man Ho,
  • Stephanie Mangesius,
  • Valentin Ladenhauf,
  • Johannes Deeg,
  • Leonhard Gruber,
  • Miar Ouaret,
  • Milovan Regodic,
  • Lukas Lenhart,
  • Bettina Pfausler,
  • Astrid Ellen Grams,
  • Ondra Petr,
  • Claudius Thomé,
  • Elke Ruth Gizewski

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/diagnostics14080841
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 8
p. 841

Abstract

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One of the main causes of the dismal prognosis in patients who survive the initial bleeding after aneurysmal subarachnoidal hemorrhage is the delayed cerebral ischaemia caused by vasospasm. Studies suggest that cerebral magnesium and pH may potentially play a role in the pathophysiology of this adverse event. Using phosphorous magnetic resonance spectrocopy (31P-MRS), we calculated the cerebral magnesium (Mg) and pH levels in 13 patients who suffered from aSAH. The values between the group that developed clinically significant vasospasm (n = 7) and the group that did not (n = 6) were compared. The results of this study show significantly lower cerebral Mg levels (p = 0.019) and higher pH levels (p < 0.001) in the cumulative group (all brain voxels together) in patients who developed clinically significant vasospasm. Further clinical studies on a larger group of carefully selected patients are needed in order to predict clinically significant vasospasm.

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