Sustained diffusion reversal with in-bore reperfusion in monkey stroke models: confirmed by prospective magnetic resonance imaging

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Title
Sustained diffusion reversal with in-bore reperfusion in monkey stroke models: confirmed by prospective magnetic resonance imaging
Author(s)
K S Yi; C H Choi; Sang-Rae Lee; H J Lee; Youngjeon LeeKang Jin Jeong; J Hwang; Kyu Tae Chang; S H Cha
Bibliographic Citation
Journal of Cerebral Blood Flow and Metabolism, vol. 37, no. 6, pp. 2002-2012
Publication Year
2017
Abstract
Although early diffusion lesion reversal after recanalization treatment of acute ischaemic stroke has been observed in clinical settings, the reversibility of lesions observed by diffusion-weighted imaging remains controversial. Here, we present consistent observations of sustained diffusion lesion reversal after transient middle cerebral artery occlusion in a monkey stroke model. Seven rhesus macaques were subjected to endovascular transient middle cerebral artery occlusion with in-bore reperfusion confirmed by repeated prospective diffusion-weighted imaging. Early diffusion lesion reversal was defined as lesion reversal at 3 h after reperfusion. Sustained diffusion lesion reversal was defined as the difference between the ADC-derived pre-reperfusion maximal ischemic lesion volume (ADCD-P Match) and the lesion on 4-week follow-up FLAIR magnetic resonance imaging. Diffusion lesions were spatiotemporally assessed using a 3-D voxel-based quantitative technique. The ADCD-P Match was 9.7 ± 6.0% (mean ± SD) and the final infarct was 1.2-6.0% of the volume of the ipsilateral hemisphere. Early diffusion lesion reversal and sustained diffusion lesion reversal were observed in all seven animals, and the calculated percentages compared with their ADCD-P Match ranged from 8.3 to 51.9% (mean ± SD, 26.9 ± 15.3%) and 41.7-77.8% (mean ± SD, 65.4 ± 12.2%), respectively. Substantial sustained diffusion lesion reversal and early reversal were observed in all animals in this monkey model of transient focal cerebral ischaemia
Keyword
Animal modelBrain imagingBrain ischaemiaBrain recoveryDiffusion-weighted magnetic resonance imaging
ISSN
0271-678X
Publisher
Sage
DOI
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0271678X16659302
Type
Article
Appears in Collections:
Ochang Branch Institute > Division of National Bio-Infrastructure > National Primate Research Center > 1. Journal Articles
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