BOLD Cerebrovascular Reactivity and NOVA Quantitative MR Angiography in Adult Patients with Moyamoya Vasculopathy Undergoing Cerebral Bypass Surgery.
Loris Garbani NeriniJacopo BellomoLara Maria HöbnerVittorio StumpoElisa ColomboChristiaan Hendrik Bas van NiftrikTilman SchubertZsolt KulcsarSusanne WegenerAndreas LuftLuca RegliJorn FierstraMartina SebökGiuseppe EspositoPublished in: Brain sciences (2024)
Revascularization surgery for the symptomatic hemisphere with hemodynamic impairment is effective for Moyamoya vasculopathy patients. However, careful patient selection is crucial and ideally supported by advanced quantitative hemodynamic imaging. Recently, blood oxygenation level-dependent cerebrovascular reactivity (BOLD-CVR) and quantitative magnetic resonance angiography with non-invasive optimal vessel analysis (qMRA-NOVA) have gained prominence in assessing these patients. This study aims to present the results of BOLD-CVR and qMRA-NOVA imaging along with the changes in cerebral hemodynamics and flow status following flow augmentation with superficial temporal artery-middle cerebral artery (STA-MCA) bypass in our Moyamoya vasculopathy patient cohort. Symptomatic patients with Moyamoya vasculopathy treated at the Clinical Neuroscience Center of the University Hospital Zurich who underwent hemodynamic and flow imaging (BOLD-CVR and qMRA-NOVA) before and after bypass were included in the analysis. Reduced hemispheric volume flow rates, as well as impaired BOLD-CVR, were measured in all 12 patients with Moyamoya vasculopathy before STA-MCA bypass surgery. Following the surgical procedure, post-operative BOLD-CVR demonstrated a non-significant increase in BOLD-CVR values within the revascularized, symptomatic middle cerebral artery territory and cerebral hemisphere. The results of the statistical tests should be viewed as indicative due to the small sample size. Additionally, post-operative qMRA-NOVA revealed a significant improvement in the hemispheric volume flow rate of the affected hemisphere due to the additional bypass flow rate. Our findings affirm the presence of hemodynamic and flow impairments in the symptomatic hemisphere of the Moyamoya vasculopathy patients. Bypass surgery proves effective in improving both BOLD-CVR impairment and the hemispheric volume flow rate in our patient cohort.
Keyphrases
- middle cerebral artery
- end stage renal disease
- minimally invasive
- magnetic resonance
- high resolution
- newly diagnosed
- ejection fraction
- chronic kidney disease
- resting state
- internal carotid artery
- coronary artery bypass
- peritoneal dialysis
- prognostic factors
- subarachnoid hemorrhage
- mass spectrometry
- percutaneous coronary intervention
- acute coronary syndrome
- coronary artery bypass grafting
- brain injury
- atrial fibrillation
- surgical site infection
- cerebral ischemia