Perfusion patterns as a tool for emergency stroke diagnosis: differentiating proximal and distal MCA occlusions

Background To evaluate the effectiveness of a novel Perfusion Pattern (PP) scale in differentiating between proximal and distal middle cerebral artery (MCA) occlusions in patients with acute ischaemic stroke.Methods This retrospective study included 201 patients with acute ischaemic stroke, categori...

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Main Authors: Joaquin Ortega-Quintanilla, Walter Heindel, Boris Buerke, Aglae Velasco Gonzalez, Cristina Sauerland, Dennis Görlich, Liu Jingyu, Norbert Meier
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMJ Publishing Group 2025-02-01
Series:BMJ Neurology Open
Online Access:https://neurologyopen.bmj.com/content/7/1/e001001.full
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Summary:Background To evaluate the effectiveness of a novel Perfusion Pattern (PP) scale in differentiating between proximal and distal middle cerebral artery (MCA) occlusions in patients with acute ischaemic stroke.Methods This retrospective study included 201 patients with acute ischaemic stroke, categorised into two groups: those with M1 segment occlusions (n=114) and those with distal medium vessel occlusions (n=87). We analysed multimodal stroke CT imaging and clinical data, focusing on the occlusion site, hypoperfusion extent and basal ganglia involvement. Patients with tandem stenosis or multiple acute occlusions were excluded. Perfusion patterns were categorised into three types (PP-1, PP-2 and PP-3) based on the extent of hypoperfusion. Statistical analysis explored associations between the occlusion site, perfusion pattern and collateral status.Results Among the 201 patients (mean age 75±14 years, 86 men), PP-1 was observed in 36.8% of patients (74/201), PP-2 in 27.4% (55/201) and PP-3 in 35.8% (72/201). The distribution of PP varied significantly by occlusion site (p<0.0001). Distal medium vessel occlusions were associated with PP-1 in 78.4% of cases (58/74), while PP-3 was most prevalent in M1 occlusions (90.3%, 65/72). The contingency coefficient revealed that occlusion location had a stronger association with the perfusion pattern (c=0.556) than collateral type (c=0.245). However, 21.6% of M1 occlusions (16/74) showed a PP-1 pattern and 9.7% of distal medium vessel occlusions (7/72) exhibited PP-3. Basal ganglia infarction presence was a reliable indicator of M1 occlusion with a 94% likelihood.Conclusions Perfusion patterns can effectively differentiate between proximal and distal medium vessel MCA occlusions, aiding targeted assessment of CT angiography.
ISSN:2632-6140