High-Intensity Area in the Deep White Matter Indicating Hemodynamic Compromise in Internal Carotid Artery Occlusive Disorders
- 1 October 1991
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Medical Association (AMA) in Archives of Neurology
- Vol. 48 (10), 1067-1071
- https://doi.org/10.1001/archneur.1991.00530220089024
Abstract
• We used positron emission tomography and magnetic resonance imaging to evaluate 16 patients with transient ischemic attacks or minor strokes and unilateral internal carotid occlusive disease, five with stenosis, and 11 with occlusion. Cerebral blood flow, cerebral metabolic rate of oxygen, oxygen extraction fraction, cerebral blood volume, and T2-weighted magnetic resonance images obtained at 1.5-T were analyzed. Irrespective of vascular disease, patients with a confluent high-intensity area in the middle centrum semiovale had substantially decreased cerebral blood flow and ratio of cerebral blood flow to blood volume in the middle cerebral artery distribution of the cortex, with a substantially increased oxygen extraction fraction. We concluded that the confluent high-intensity area in the deep white matter region indicates hemodynamic compromise in the affected hemisphere in internal carotid artery occlusive disease.Keywords
This publication has 7 references indexed in Scilit:
- Associations Between Neuroanatomic Patterns of Cerebral Infarctions and Vascular DementiaThe Journal of Neuropsychiatry and Clinical Neurosciences, 2021
- MR Imaging of the BrainPublished by Springer Publishing Company ,2015
- Progressive periventricular hyperintensity on MR imagingAmerican Journal of Roentgenology, 1989
- The arterial patterns associated with internal carotid disease and cerebral infarcts.Stroke, 1986
- Positron emission tomography and its application to the study of cerebrovascular disease in man.Stroke, 1985
- The pathogenesis of watershed infarcts in the brain.Stroke, 1984
- The pathogenesis of strokes from internal carotid artery occlusion. Diagnostic and therapeutical implications.Stroke, 1983