4.6 Article

Relationships between brain and body temperature, clinical and imaging outcomes after ischemic stroke

Journal

JOURNAL OF CEREBRAL BLOOD FLOW AND METABOLISM
Volume 33, Issue 7, Pages 1083-1089

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
DOI: 10.1038/jcbfm.2013.52

Keywords

brain temperature; ischemic stroke; lesion growth; magnetic resonance spectroscopy; outcome

Funding

  1. UK Stroke Association [TSA 2006/11]
  2. Foundation for Polish Science
  3. International Brain Research Organization (IBRO)
  4. Polish Ministry of Science and Higher Education
  5. Row Fogo Charitable Trust
  6. Cohen Charitable Trust
  7. Scottish Funding Council through the SINAPSE (Scottish Imaging Network - A Platform for Scientific Excellence)

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Pyrexia soon after stroke is associated with severe stroke and poor functional outcome. Few studies have assessed brain temperature after stroke in patients, so little is known of its associations with body temperature, stroke severity, or outcome. We measured temperatures in ischemic and normal-appearing brain using H-1-magnetic resonance spectroscopy and its correlations with body (tympanic) temperature measured four-hourly, infarct growth by 5 days, early neurologic (National Institute of Health Stroke Scale, NIHSS) and late functional outcome (death or dependency). Among 40 patients (mean age 73 years, median NIHSS 7, imaged at median 17 hours), temperature in ischemic brain was higher than in normal-appearing brain on admission (38.6 degrees C-core, 37.9 degrees C-contralateral hemisphere, P = 0.03) but both were equally elevated by 5 days; both were higher than tympanic temperature. Ischemic lesion temperature was not associated with NIHSS or 3-month functional outcome; in contrast, higher contralateral normal-appearing brain temperature was associated with worse NIHSS, infarct expansion and poor functional outcome, similar to associations for tympanic temperature. We conclude that brain temperature is higher than body temperature; that elevated temperature in ischemic brain reflects a local tissue response to ischemia, whereas pyrexia reflects the systemic response to stroke, occurs later, and is associated with adverse outcomes.

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