磁共振成像
脑血流
医学
病变
灌注
冲程(发动机)
缺血
中枢神经系统疾病
磁共振弥散成像
核医学
灌注扫描
脑缺血
核磁共振
心脏病学
内科学
病理
放射科
物理
工程类
机械工程
作者
Bartosz Karaszewski,Joanna M. Wardlaw,Ian Marshall,Vera Cvoro,Karolina Wartolowska,Kristin Haga,Paul A. Armitage,Mark E. Bastin,Martin Dennis
摘要
Abstract Objective Pyrexia is associated with poor outcome after stroke, but the temperature changes in the brain after stroke are poorly understood. We used magnetic resonance spectroscopic imaging (water‐to‐ N ‐acetylaspartate frequency shift) to measure cerebral temperature noninvasively in stroke patients. Methods We performed magnetic resonance diffusion, perfusion (diffusion‐ and perfusion‐weighted imaging), and magnetic resonance spectroscopic imaging, compared temperatures in tissues as defined by the diffusion‐weighted imaging appearance (definitely abnormal, possibly abnormal and immediately adjacent normal‐appearing brain, and normal brain), and tested associations with lesion and patient characteristics. Results Among 40 patients, temperature was higher in possibly abnormal (37.63°C) than in definitely abnormal tissue (37.30°C; p < 0.001) or in normal‐appearing brain (ipsilateral, 37.16°C; contralateral, 37.22°C; both p < 0.001). Ischemic lesion temperature increased before normal brain temperature. Higher temperatures occurred in lesions that were large, had diffusion/perfusion‐weighted imaging mismatch, had reduced cerebral blood flow, and in clinically severe strokes. Only 1 of 25 patients with ischemic lesion temperature greater than 37.5°C was pyrexial. Interpretation Temperature is elevated in acutely ischemic brain. More work is required to determine whether raised temperature results from ischemic metabolic reactions, impaired heat exchange from reduced cerebral blood flow, or early inflammatory cell activity (or a combination of these), but magnetic resonance spectroscopic imaging could be used in studies of temperature after brain injury and to monitor interventions. Ann Neurol 2006
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