A high-resolution MRI study of relationship between remodeling patterns and ischemic stroke in patients with atherosclerotic middle cerebral artery stenosis

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Abstract

Purpose: Recently, high-resolution magnetic resonance imaging (HR-MRI) has been used to depict the wall characteristics of the intracranial arteries. The aim of this study was to explain the relationship between the remodeling patterns and acute ischemic stroke in patients with atherosclerotic middle cerebral artery (MCA) stenosis using HR-MRI. Materials and Methods: From August 2015 to May 2016, we prospectively screened 33 consecutive patients with unilateral MCA stenosis using time-to-flight MR angiography, including 15 patients with symptomatic MCA stenosis and 18 patients with asymptomatic MCA stenosis. Among them, 14 patients were diagnosed as positive remodeling (PR) and 19 as negative remodeling or non-remodeling. The cross-sectional images of the stenotic MCA wall on HR-MRI including T1WI, T2WI, and PDWI were compared between the symptomatic group and the asymptomatic group as well as the PR group and the non-PR group, based on the vessel area, lumen area, wall area, plaque area, degree of stenosis, remodeling index, and NIHSS score. Results: The symptomatic group had larger wall area (P = 0.040), plaque area (P < 0.001), degree of stenosis (P = 0.038), remodeling index (P < 0.001), and NIHSS score (P = 0.003) as well as smaller lumen area (P = 0.001) than the asymptomatic group. In addition, more PR patients were observed in symptomatic group. The PR group had larger plaque area (P = 0.014) and NIHSS score (P = 0.037) than the non-PR group. Demographic and clinical characteristics between the symptomatic group and the asymptomatic group, the PR group and the non-PR group showed no statistical difference. Conclusion: The current study suggests that the HR-MRI has emerged as a promising tool to detect the characteristics of intracranial arteries wall and reveal the relationship between remodeling patterns and ischemic stroke. The PR is an unsafe remodeling way and is prone to cause acute ischemic stroke.

Figures

  • TABLE 1 | Demographic and clinical characteristics of symptomatic group and asymptomatic group.
  • TABLE 2 | Demographic and clinical characteristics of PR group and non-PR group.
  • TABLE 3 | Quantitative data of the MCA wall in symptomatic group and asymptomatic group.
  • FIGURE 1 | HR-MRI of a symptomatic MCA stenosis in an 85-year-old male who presented with left limb weakness for 10 hours. (A) DWI shows an acute ischemic stroke in the distribution of the right MCA. (B) The TOF-MRA manifests severe stenosis of the M1 segment of right MCA (white arrow). (C) The plaque in T2-weighted HR-MRI (black arrow). (D) The plaque in T1-weighted HR-MRI (black arrow). (E). Measurement at the most narrowed site in proton density-weighted HR-MRI: the vessel area is 18.00 mm2 and the lumen area is 2.00 mm2. (F) Measurement at the reference site in proton density-weighted HR-MRI: the vessel area is 16.00 mm2 and the lumen area is 6.00 mm2. The remodeling index = 18.00 mm2/16.00 mm2 = 1.13 (positive remodeling); the degree of stenosis = (1–2.00 mm2/6.00 mm2) = 66.67%.
  • FIGURE 2 | HR-MRI of an asymptomatic MCA stenosis in an 82-year-old male who presented with aphasia for 1 day. (A) DWI shows normal. (B) The TOF-MRA manifests severe stenosis of the M1 segment of right MCA (white arrow). (C) The plaque in T2-weighted HR-MRI (black arrow). (D) The plaque in T1-weighted HR-MRI (black arrow). (E) Measurement at the most narrowed site in proton density-weighted HR-MRI: the vessel area is 16.00 mm2 and the lumen area is 3.00 mm2. (F) Measurement at the reference site in proton density-weighted HR-MRI: the vessel area is 23.00 mm2 and the lumen area is 11.00 mm2. The remodeling index = 16.00 mm2/23.00 mm2 = 0.70 (negative remodeling); the degree of stenosis = (1–3.00 mm2/11.00 mm2) = 72.73%.
  • TABLE 4 | Quantitative data of the MCA wall in PR group and non-PR group.

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Zhang, D. F., Chen, Y. C., Chen, H., Zhang, W. D., Sun, J., Mao, C. N., … Yin, X. (2017). A high-resolution MRI study of relationship between remodeling patterns and ischemic stroke in patients with atherosclerotic middle cerebral artery stenosis. Frontiers in Aging Neuroscience, 9(MAY). https://doi.org/10.3389/fnagi.2017.00140

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