Authors
BD Murphy, AJ Fox, DH Lee, DJ Sahlas, SE Black, MJ Hogan, SB Coutts, AM Demchuk, M Goyal, RI Aviv, S Symons, IB Gulka, V Beletsky, D Pelz, V Hachinski, R Chan, T-Y Lee
Publication date
2006/7/1
Journal
Stroke
Volume
37
Issue
7
Pages
1771-1777
Publisher
Lippincott Williams & Wilkins
Description
Background and Purpose— We investigated whether computed tomography (CT) perfusion–derived cerebral blood flow (CBF) and cerebral blood volume (CBV) could be used to differentiate between penumbra and infarcted gray matter in a limited, exploratory sample of acute stroke patients.
Methods— Thirty patients underwent a noncontrast CT (NCCT), CT angiography (CTA), and CT perfusion (CTP) scan within 7 hours of stroke onset, NCCT and CTA at 24 hours, and NCCT at 5 to 7 days. Twenty-five patients met the criteria for inclusion and were subsequently divided into 2 groups: those with recanalization at 24 hours (n=16) and those without (n=9). Penumbra was operationally defined as tissue with an admission CBF <25 mL · 100 g−1 · min−1 that was not infarcted on the 5- to 7-day NCCT. Logistic regression was applied to differentiate between infarct and penumbra data points.
Results— For …
Total citations
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