Type and extent of hemispheric brain infarctions and clinical outcome in early and delayed middle cerebral artery recanalization
Citation Manager Formats
Make Comment
See Comments

Abstract
We evaluated the influence of time of recanalization or degree of initial leptomeningeal collateral blood flow in cardioembolic or arterio-arterial middle cerebral artery (MCA) occlusion on infarct size and clinical outcome in a series of 34 consecutive acute stroke patients with main stem (N = 31) or major branch (N = 3) occlusions using CT, initial cerebral arteriography (N = 21), repetitive close-meshed transcranial Doppler ultrasonography, and a neurologic stroke scale. We treated 15 patients with tissue plasminogen activator intravenously within the first 6 hours. The type and size of infarction depended on the location of the occluding lesions within the MCA trunk. Proximal MCA occlusion always led to infarction involving the striatum and internal capsule. Sixty-five percent of patients showed recanalization of the occluded MCA within 1 week. Following MCA recanalization, hyperperfusion was present in 38 to 44% of cases. There was a marginally significant relation between size of infarction on CT and recanalization time within the first 24 hours. The more rapidly recanalization occurred, the smaller the size of the infarct. When recanalization time was greater than 8 hours, the lesions always extended to the cortex. An additional good leptomeningeal collateral blood flow significantly reduced the size of the infarct and improved clinical outcome after 17 days and after 10 months. Early recanalization of embolic MCA occlusions within up to 8 hours, in conjunction with good transcortical collateralization, has a favorable impact on infarct size and outcome and may constitute the therapeutic window of opportunity.
- © 2005 by the American College of Gastroenterology
Letters: Rapid online correspondence
REQUIREMENTS
You must ensure that your Disclosures have been updated within the previous six months. Please go to our Submission Site to add or update your Disclosure information.
Your co-authors must send a completed Publishing Agreement Form to Neurology Staff (not necessary for the lead/corresponding author as the form below will suffice) before you upload your comment.
If you are responding to a comment that was written about an article you originally authored:
You (and co-authors) do not need to fill out forms or check disclosures as author forms are still valid
and apply to letter.
Submission specifications:
- Submissions must be < 200 words with < 5 references. Reference 1 must be the article on which you are commenting.
- Submissions should not have more than 5 authors. (Exception: original author replies can include all original authors of the article)
- Submit only on articles published within 6 months of issue date.
- Do not be redundant. Read any comments already posted on the article prior to submission.
- Submitted comments are subject to editing and editor review prior to posting.
You May Also be Interested in
Dr. Babak Hooshmand and Dr. David Smith
► Watch
Related Articles
- No related articles found.