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Research ArticleExtracranial Vascular

Changes of Time-Attenuation Curve Blood Flow Parameters in Patients with and without Carotid Stenosis

C.-J. Lin, F.-C. Chang, W.-Y. Guo, S.-C. Hung, C.-B. Luo, J. Beilner, M. Kowarschik and W.-F. Chu
American Journal of Neuroradiology June 2015, 36 (6) 1176-1181; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4239
C.-J. Lin
aFrom the Department of Radiology (C.-J.L., F.-C.C., W.-Y.G., S.-C.H., C.-B.L., W.-F.C.), Taipei Veterans General Hospital, Taipei, Taiwan
bSchool of Medicine (C.-J.L., F.-C.C., W.-Y.G., S.-C.H., C.-B.L.), National Yang-Ming University, Taipei, Taiwan
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F.-C. Chang
aFrom the Department of Radiology (C.-J.L., F.-C.C., W.-Y.G., S.-C.H., C.-B.L., W.-F.C.), Taipei Veterans General Hospital, Taipei, Taiwan
bSchool of Medicine (C.-J.L., F.-C.C., W.-Y.G., S.-C.H., C.-B.L.), National Yang-Ming University, Taipei, Taiwan
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W.-Y. Guo
aFrom the Department of Radiology (C.-J.L., F.-C.C., W.-Y.G., S.-C.H., C.-B.L., W.-F.C.), Taipei Veterans General Hospital, Taipei, Taiwan
bSchool of Medicine (C.-J.L., F.-C.C., W.-Y.G., S.-C.H., C.-B.L.), National Yang-Ming University, Taipei, Taiwan
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S.-C. Hung
aFrom the Department of Radiology (C.-J.L., F.-C.C., W.-Y.G., S.-C.H., C.-B.L., W.-F.C.), Taipei Veterans General Hospital, Taipei, Taiwan
bSchool of Medicine (C.-J.L., F.-C.C., W.-Y.G., S.-C.H., C.-B.L.), National Yang-Ming University, Taipei, Taiwan
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C.-B. Luo
aFrom the Department of Radiology (C.-J.L., F.-C.C., W.-Y.G., S.-C.H., C.-B.L., W.-F.C.), Taipei Veterans General Hospital, Taipei, Taiwan
bSchool of Medicine (C.-J.L., F.-C.C., W.-Y.G., S.-C.H., C.-B.L.), National Yang-Ming University, Taipei, Taiwan
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J. Beilner
cAngiography and Interventional X-Ray Systems (J.B.), Siemens Ltd China, Healthcare Sector, Shanghai, P.R. China
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M. Kowarschik
dAngiography and Interventional X-Ray Systems (M.K.), Siemens AG, Healthcare Sector, Erlangen, Germany.
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W.-F. Chu
aFrom the Department of Radiology (C.-J.L., F.-C.C., W.-Y.G., S.-C.H., C.-B.L., W.-F.C.), Taipei Veterans General Hospital, Taipei, Taiwan
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    Fig 1.

    Anteroposterior (A) and lateral (B) views of parametric color-coding of quantitative DSA. A, The ROI of the ICA is located at the midpoint of the cervical portion of the ICA. The ROI of M1 is located at the midpoint of the first segment of the middle cerebral artery. The sigmoid sinus ROI is located at the midpoint of the ipsilateral sigmoid sinus. The jugular vein ROI is located in the internal jugular vein at the same level as the ICA ROI. B, The ICA ROI is located in the cavernous portion of the ICA. The M2 ROI is located in the insular branch of the MCA. The PV ROI is located in the outlet of the parietal vein. The SSS ROI is located 2 cm above the confluence of the SSS.

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    Fig 2.

    Time-attenuation curves of lateral view DSA in a healthy subject. The blue curve represents the TDC of the ROI in the cavernous portion of the ICA. Tmax is the time point at which the ROI reaches maximal intensity. The MS of an ROI is defined by the maximal tangential slope located between arrival time and Tmax. FWHM is the width of the waveform at the level of half maximum concentration.

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    Fig 3.

    Receiver operating characteristic curves of all significantly different rTmax values (A), all significantly different MS values (B), and all significantly different FWHM values (C) in differentiating patients with stenosis from control groups.

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    Fig 4.

    TDC of lateral views of angiography are from a healthy individual (A) and a patient with 80% carotid stenosis (B). Both green lines are TDCs of M2. The rTmax of M2 in the patient with stenosis is 0.34 seconds, which was more prolonged than that (0.27 seconds) in the healthy individual. The FWHM of M2 (2.9 seconds) in the patient with stenosis is longer than that (1.8 seconds) in the healthy individual. The ICA (dark blue curves), sigmoid sinus (red curves), and internal jugular vein (light blue curves) all demonstrate prolonged rTmax and are right-shifted in the patient with stenosis. These delayed and dispersed phenomena of angiographic TDCs are consistent with those observed in MR imaging and CT perfusion imaging.

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    Table 1:

    Patient characteristics for groups A and B

    Group A (Stenosis)Group B (Healthy)P Value
    No.7056
    Age (yr)73.6 ± 11.665.6 ± 10.2<.001a
    Heart rate (beats/min)69.9 ± 17.272.6 ± 12.30.312
    Blood pressure (mm Hg)92.8 ± 19.997.6 ± 18.50.124
    Stenotic degree (%)81.4%NANA
    Prior minor stroke19 (27%)1 (1.7%)<.001a
    • Note:—NA indicates not applicable.

    • ↵a Statistically significant (t test, P < .05). There was no measurable stenosis in the healthy (control) population.

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    Table 2:

    Correlation of degree of stenosis with rTmax, MS, and FWHMa

    rTmaxMSFWHM
    Degree of stenosis (%)M2 (0.380)M1 (0.486)bPV (−0.448)b
    PV (0.280)SS (0.222)SSS (−0.238)
    SSS (0.272)JV (0.264)M1 (−0.305)
    • Note:—SS indicates sigmoid sinus; JV, internal jugular vein.

    • ↵a ROIs demonstrating statistically significant Pearson correlations are listed in each cell (correlations are given in parentheses).

    • ↵b These 2 parameters were mildly correlated (r > 0.4).

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    Table 3:

    Comparison of group A and B values for rTmax, MS, and FWHM for 6 different ROIs

    ROIGroup AGroup BP Value
    Stenosis (n = 70)Healthy (n = 56)
    rTmax
        M20.77 ± 0.520.58 ± 0.32.005a
        PV5.08 ± 1.324.38 ± 1.38.001a
        SSS6.35 ± 1.795.44 ± 1.44.001a
        M10.66 ± 0.310.46 ± 0.46.001a
        SS6.71 ± 1.915.91 ± 1.67.004a
        JV7.29 ± 1.776.60 ± 1.62.008a
    MS
        M2337.15 ± 166.18390.39 ± 166.98.03a
        PV159.34 ± 73.36170.56 ± 99.95.43
        SSS103.78 ± 57.8134.38 ± 111.07.03a
        M1331.59 ± 144.43454.44 ± 320.48.003a
        SS100.32 ± 58.2297.02 ± 47.17.699
        JV116.78 ± 63.13136.22 ± 109.63.185
    FWHM
        M22.54 ± 1.142.09 ± 0.70<.001a
        PV2.84 ± 2.372.74 ± 1.65.74
        SSS3.49 ± 2.383.86 ± 0.75.607
        M13.57 ± 1.902.78 ± 0.92.002a
        SS4.33 ± 1.833.72 ± 1.17.61
        JVbNANANA
    • Note:—SS indicates sigmoid sinus; JV, internal jugular vein.

    • ↵a Statistically significant difference (t test, P < .05).

    • ↵b The FWHM of the JV was not applicable because the DSA acquisition terminated before the waveform of the JV dropped in most cases.

    • View popup
    Table 4:

    Cutoff values of 10 significant TDC parameters for detecting stenosis flow with optimized sensitivity and specificity

    ROI VariableAUCP ValueCutoff ValueSensitivitySpecificity
    rTmax
        M20.638 (0.555–0.722).0020.41583.6%37.6%
        PV0.615 (0.53–0.701).0114.90555.2%63.4%
        SSS0.655 (0.57–0.74)a.0016.89555.2%73.7%
        M10.663 (0.58–0.746)a.0010.4581.0%58.2%
        SS0.582 (0.495–0.669).0457.4273.5%91.2%
        JV0.589 (0.503–0.676).0457.7763.7%84.9%
    MS
        M20.606 (0.517–0.695).02511.589.6%21.8%
        M10.689 (0.608–0.77)a.041378.366.7%60.0%
        SSS0.636 (0.547–0.725).00290.555.1%75.5%
    FWHM
        M20.609 (0.52–0.699).0133.4557.1%67.7%
        M10.679 (0.59–0.77)a.0013.4057.1%78.4%
    • Note:—SS indicates sigmoid sinus; JV, internal jugular vein.

    • ↵a The best 4 parameters for detecting stenotic flow.

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American Journal of Neuroradiology: 36 (6)
American Journal of Neuroradiology
Vol. 36, Issue 6
1 Jun 2015
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C.-J. Lin, F.-C. Chang, W.-Y. Guo, S.-C. Hung, C.-B. Luo, J. Beilner, M. Kowarschik, W.-F. Chu
Changes of Time-Attenuation Curve Blood Flow Parameters in Patients with and without Carotid Stenosis
American Journal of Neuroradiology Jun 2015, 36 (6) 1176-1181; DOI: 10.3174/ajnr.A4239

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Changes of Time-Attenuation Curve Blood Flow Parameters in Patients with and without Carotid Stenosis
C.-J. Lin, F.-C. Chang, W.-Y. Guo, S.-C. Hung, C.-B. Luo, J. Beilner, M. Kowarschik, W.-F. Chu
American Journal of Neuroradiology Jun 2015, 36 (6) 1176-1181; DOI: 10.3174/ajnr.A4239
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