作者
Jorge A Roa, Mario Zanaty, Anthony J Piscopo, Timothy W Morris, Ryan Sabotin, Daizo Ishii, Alberto Varon, Ashrita Raghuram, Yongjun Lu, Edgar A Samaniego, David M Hasan
发表日期
2021
期刊
Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine
卷号
5
页码范围
162-171
简介
Background
Wall enhancement of unruptured intracranial aneurysms (UIAs) on high-resolution vessel wall imaging (HR-VWI) has been applied as a surrogate of inflammation. MR-quantitative susceptibility mapping (QSM) can identify microbleeds (MBs) at the interface between aneurysm wall and brain tissue preceding subarachnoid hemorrhage.
Objective
To assess the correlation between HR-VWI and QSM findings and define an optimal cut-off for aneurysm wall enhancement based on the presence of MBs.
Methods
Patients with UIAs prospectively underwent QSM and HR-VWI. UIAs were deemed unstable when MBs were identified on QSM. The contrast enhancement ratio between maximal signal intensity values measured in the aneurysmal wall and the pituitary stalk (CRstalk) on T1 post-contrast images was calculated. Multiple t-tests were computed to assess the correlation between morphological variables, PHASES scores, CRstalk, and presence of MBs. A ROC curve was plotted to determine the best CRstalk cutoff to differentiate stable from unstable UIAs.
Results
A total of 81 UIAs were analyzed: 71 stable (MBs absent) and 10 unstable (MBs present). Unstable UIAs were larger (8.4 ± 5.5 mm vs 5.5 ± 2.3 mm, P=0.007), showed higher CRstalk (0.6 ± 0.2 vs 0.5 ± 0.1, P=0.05), and scored higher on PHASES (6.9 ± 3.5 vs 4.8 ± 2.6, P=0.02). ROC curve analysis demonstrated the best CRstalk cut-off to discriminate between UIAs with and without MBs was ≥ 0.55 (82% sensitivity, 67% specificity).
Conclusion
There is a strong positive association between aneurysmal wall enhancement and presence of MBs. CRstalk ≥ 0.55 may be used …
引用总数
20212022202320241221
学术搜索中的文章
JA Roa, M Zanaty, AJ Piscopo, TW Morris, R Sabotin… - Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine, 2021