Moving Beyond a Single Perfusion Threshold to Define Penumbra
Author(s) -
Yoshinari Nagakane,
Sören Christensen,
Toshiyasu Ogata,
Leonid Churilov,
Henry Ma,
Mark Parsons,
Patricia Desmond,
Christopher Levi,
Kenneth Butcher,
Stephen M. Davis,
Geoffrey A. Donnan
Publication year - 2012
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/strokeaha.111.643932
Subject(s) - penumbra , medicine , perfusion , infarction , thrombolysis , nuclear medicine , lesion , stroke (engine) , radiology , cardiology , surgery , ischemia , myocardial infarction , mechanical engineering , engineering
The mismatch lesion volumes defined by perfusion-weighted imaging exceeding diffusion-weighted imaging have been used as a marker of ischemic penumbral tissue. Defining the perfusion lesion by thresholding has shown promise as a practical tool; several positron emission tomography studies have indicated a more probabilistic relationship between perfusion and infarction. Here, we used a randomized controlled trial dataset of tissue-type plasminogen activator 3 to 6 hours after stroke to: (1) quantify the relationship between severity of hypoperfusion (measured by Tmax) and risk of infarction; (2) exploit this relationship to present a novel definition of mismatch based on infarct probabilities rather than dichotomies; and (3) examine the treatment response in the subgroup of patients with mismatch by the new definition.
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