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Derivation of Power M‐Mode Transcranial Doppler Criteria for Angiographic Proven MCA Occlusion
Author(s) -
Saqqur Maher,
Hill Michael D.,
Alexandrov Andrei V.,
Roy Jayanta,
Schebel Marcia,
Krol Andrea,
Garami Zsolt,
Shuaib Ashfaq,
Demchuk Andrew M.
Publication year - 2006
Publication title -
journal of neuroimaging
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.822
H-Index - 64
eISSN - 1552-6569
pISSN - 1051-2284
DOI - 10.1111/j.1552-6569.2006.00055.x
Subject(s) - medicine , transcranial doppler , occlusion , middle cerebral artery , digital subtraction angiography , receiver operating characteristic , angiography , stroke (engine) , cardiology , cerebral arteries , ischemia , radiology , nuclear medicine , mechanical engineering , engineering
Background. Stringent transcranial Doppler (TCD) criteria for diagnosing occlusion are needed for more reliable TCD performance at bedside in the acute stroke setting. Subjects and Methods. At three academic stroke centers, we performed TCD examination for patients with symptoms of cerebral ischemia who underwent digital subtraction angiography (DSA). We used a standard insonation protocol with power M‐mode Doppler (PMD) TCD (TCD 100M, Spencer Technologies Inc., Seattle, WA). We collected mean flow velocity (MFV), pulsatility indices (PI), and power M‐mode resistance signature (absent, high, or low) in symptomatic middle (MCA), anterior (ACA), posterior (PCA), and in affected (a), ipsilateral (i), and contralateral (c‐lat) cerebral arteries. Ratios of aMCA/c‐lat MCA, aMCA/iACA, and aMCA/iPCA MFV were subsequently calculated. PMD‐TCD flow findings were evaluated with a receiver‐operating characteristic (ROC) analysis for angiographically proven MCA occlusion. Results. We studied 120 patients with acute cerebral ischemia with PMD‐TCD examinations prior to or immediately after DSA. Lower aMCA velocities pointed to higher probability of occlusion ( P = .055). The aMCA/iPCA MFV ratio was superior to the aMCA/iACA ratio and strongly predictive of occlusion at a threshold ratio of 0.5 (RR 2.31 CI 95 2.13‐2.51). High resistance or absent M‐mode flow signatures in the proximal MCA were present in 87% of M1 and M2 MCA occlusions (probability 87%). In the presence of a low‐resistance PMD signature, obtaining the aMCA/iPCA MFV ratio <0.5 increases probability of occlusion to 87%. Normal MFV ratios and low‐resistance M‐mode signatures are highly predictive of a negative angiogram for MCA occlusion. Conclusion. In acute cerebral ischemia, reliable criteria for proximal MCA occlusion have been developed based on combination of MFV ratios and M‐mode flow resistance signatures. Validation of these criteria will require multicenter studies.