3.8 Article

Cerebral vasomotor reactivity in border zone infarcts; a transcranial Doppler study

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1186/s41983-019-0089-4

Keywords

Cerebral vasomotor reactivity; Hemodynamic impairment; Trans cranial Doppler; Watershed infarction

Categories

Ask authors/readers for more resources

BackgroundMany reports have emphasized that watershed infarcts are the consequence of hemodynamic compromise, but other reports have suggested that this is not always the case and have suggested that embolization plays a major role in the development of watershed infarcts. Impaired cerebral vasomotor reactivity has certain correlates in watershed hypoperfusion strokes.ObjectivesThis study aimed to assess the role of vasomotor reactivity impairment in watershed infarcts by transcranial Doppler. It also recorded correlates associated with impaired vasomotor reactivity in such patients.MethodologySixty patients with watershed infarction after more than 1month from onset were studied and grouped into three groups (14 patients with mixed internal and external watershed, 28 patients with internal watershed and 18 patients with external watershed infarcts). Magnetic resonant imaging and angiography of brain, carotid duplex, and echocardiography were done. CO2 reactivity to assess vasomotor reactivity was determined using Doppler.ResultsCerebral vasomotor reactivity was impaired significantly among the internal watershed group compared with the external watershed group (P value=0.040). In external watershed infarcts, the anterior external watershed group showed significant impairment of vasomotor reactivity compared to posterior external watershed group (P value=0.046). Impaired cerebral vasomotor reactivity was more evident in diabetic patients and not statistically related with other risk factors. It was also associated with middle cerebral artery stenosis.ConclusionThe hemodynamic impairment is related to internal watershed more than external watershed infarcts, also it is more associated with anterior than posterior external watershed infarcts. Diabetes mellitus is the most correlated cerebrovascular risk factor associated with impaired vasomotor reactivity in such patients.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

3.8
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available