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Effects of stroke on local cerebral metabolism and perfusion: Mapping by emission computed tomography of 18 FDG and 13 NH 3
Author(s) -
Kuhl David E.,
Phelps Michael E.,
Kowell Arthur P.,
Metter E. Jeffrey,
Selin Carl,
Winter James
Publication year - 1980
Publication title -
annals of neurology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 4.764
H-Index - 296
eISSN - 1531-8249
pISSN - 0364-5134
DOI - 10.1002/ana.410080108
Subject(s) - nuclear medicine , positron emission tomography , medicine , perfusion , emission computed tomography , stroke (engine) , cerebral perfusion pressure , perfusion scanning , fluorodeoxyglucose , cerebral blood flow , chemistry , cardiology , mechanical engineering , engineering
By means of emission computed tomography (ECT), we used 18 F‐fluorodeoxyglucose ( 18 FDG) and 13 N‐ammonia ( 13 NH 3 ) as indicators of abnormalities in local cerebral glucose utilization (LCMR glc ) and relative perfusion, respectively. The ECAT positron tomograph was used to scan normal control subjects and 10 stroke patients at various times during recovery. In normal subjects, mean CMR glc was 5.28 ± 0.76 mg per 100 gm tissue per minute (mean ± SD; N = 8). In patients with stroke, mean CMR glc in the contralateral hemisphere was moderately decreased during the first week, profoundly depressed in irreversible coma, and normal after clinical recovery. Quantification was restricted by incomplete understanding of tracer behavior in diseased brain, but relative local distributions of 18 FDG and 13 NH 3 trapping qualitatively reflected the increases and decreases as well as coupling and uncoupling expected for local alterations in glucose utilization and perfusion in stroke. Early after cerebrovascular occlusion there was a greater decrease in local trapping of 13 NH 3 than 18 FDG within the infarct, probably because of increased anaerobic glycolysis. Otherwise, 18 FDG was a more sensitive indicator of cerebral dysfunction than was 13 NH 3 . Hypometabolism, due to deactivation or minimal damage, was demonstrated with the 18 FDG scan in deep structures and broad zones of cerebral cortex that appeared normal on x‐ray computed tomography and technetium 99m pertechnetate scans. In its present state of development, the 18 FDG ECT method should aid in defining the location and extent of altered brain in studies of disordered function after stroke. With improved knowledge of tracer behavior in diseased brain, the method has promise for mapping the response to therapeutic intervention and increasing our understanding of how the human brain responds to stroke.

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