Intraoperative evaluation of local cerebral hemodynamic change by laser speckle contrast imaging for predicting postoperative cerebral hyperperfusion during STA-MCA bypass in adult patients with moyamoya disease

Author:

Tao Tianshu1ORCID,Zhu Wenting2,Yu Jin1,Li Xiang1,Wei Wei1,Hu Miao1,Luo Mingrui3,Wan Guiping1,Li Pengcheng2,Chen Jincao1,Zhang Jianjian1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Neurosurgery, Zhongnan Hospital of Wuhan University, Wuhan University, Wuhan, China

2. Britton Chance Center and MoE Key Laboratory for Biomedical Photonics, Wuhan National Laboratory for Optoelectronics, Huazhong University of Science and Technology, Wuhan, China

3. Department of Neurosurgery, WuHan Third Hospital, Wuhan, China

Abstract

Cerebral hyperperfusion (CHP) occurred frequently after direct superficial temporal artery–middle cerebral artery (STA-MCA) bypass surgery for moyamoya disease (MMD). We analyzed cortical microvascular density (CMD) and the change of cerebral blood flow (LΔCBF) using intraoperative laser speckle contrast imaging (LSCI) on 130 hemispheres of 95 consecutive adult patients with MMD. The demographic characteristics, cortical hemodynamic sources, bypass methods, intraoperative blood flow data, and relative CBF changes on single-photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) examination (SΔrCBF) were compared between the groups with and without CHP. The median values for CMD, LΔCBF, and SΔrCBF were significantly higher in the CHP group than in the non-CHP group (CMD 0.240 vs 0.206, P = 0.004; LΔCBF 2.285 vs 1.870, P < 0.001; SΔCBF 1.535 vs 1.260, P < 0.001). Multivariate analysis revealed that hemodynamic sources of recipient parasylvian cortical arteries from MCA (M-PSCAs), end-to-side (E-S) bypass method, CMD ≥ 0.217, and LΔCBF ≥ 1.985 were the risk factors for CHP. Intraoperative LSCI was useful for evaluating hemodynamics and predicting CHP in patients with MMD.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine,Neurology (clinical),Neurology

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