Three-dimensional transcranial Doppler blood flow mapping in patients with cerebrovascular disorders.
Author(s) -
Kurt Niederkorn,
L G Myers,
Cathy Nunn,
Marshall R. Ball,
William M. McKinney
Publication year - 1988
Publication title -
stroke
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.397
H-Index - 319
eISSN - 1524-4628
pISSN - 0039-2499
DOI - 10.1161/01.str.19.11.1335
Subject(s) - medicine , circle of willis , transcranial doppler , posterior cerebral artery , basilar artery , middle cerebral artery , blood flow , posterior communicating artery , cardiology , cerebral blood flow , magnetic resonance angiography , cerebral arteries , anterior cerebral artery , stroke (engine) , radiology , internal carotid artery , magnetic resonance imaging , ischemia , mechanical engineering , engineering
We investigated 60 patients with cerebrovascular disorders using a three-dimensional transcranial Doppler blood flow mapping system. A composite display of the circle of Willis is created with computer assistance, allowing accurate vessel identification and optimal data documentation of blood flow velocity and direction in the basal cerebral arteries. The basilar artery was insonated in every patient; the middle cerebral artery and the most distal internal carotid artery were found in 95% of the patients, the anterior cerebral artery in 85%, and the posterior cerebral artery in 84%. Insonation problems occurred predominantly in elderly women. Transcranial Doppler blood flow mapping showed an abnormal result in 23 of 60 patients (38%). An intracranial stenosis with greater than 50% diameter reduction or occlusion was found in 10 of 31 patients (32%) with completed stroke, reversible ischemic neurologic deficit, or transient ischemic attack. Collateral blood flow mechanisms could be demonstrated in patients with extracranial carotid artery occlusions. Intra-arterial cerebral angiography performed in 21 patients confirmed the transcranial Doppler blood flow mapping diagnosis in 19 (90.5%). In one patient an arteriovenous malformation diagnosed by transcranial Doppler blood flow mapping was confirmed by magnetic resonance imaging.
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