Paradoxical reduction of cerebral blood flow (CBF) after administration of the vasodilator acetazolamide is the most severe stage of cerebrovascular reactivity failure and is often associated with an increased oxyge...Paradoxical reduction of cerebral blood flow (CBF) after administration of the vasodilator acetazolamide is the most severe stage of cerebrovascular reactivity failure and is often associated with an increased oxygen extraction fraction (OEF). In this study, we aimed to reveal the mechanism underlying this phenomenon by focusing on the ratio of CBF to cerebral blood volume (CBV) as a marker of regional cerebral perfusion pressure (CPP). In 37 patients with unilateral internal carotid or middle cerebral arterial (MCA) steno-occlusive disease and 8 normal controls, the baseline CBF (CBFb), CBV, OEF, cerebral oxygen metabolic rate (CMRO2), and CBF after acetazolamide loading in the anterior and posterior MCA territories were measured by (15)~O positron emission tomography. Paradoxical CBF reduction was found in 28 of 74 regions (18 of 37 patients) in the ipsilateral hemisphere. High CBFb (〉47.6 mL/100 mL/min, n = 7) was associated with normal CBFb/CBV, increased CBV, decreased OEF, and normal CMRO2. Low CBFb (〈31.8 mL/100 mL/min, n = 9) was associated with decreased CBFb/CBV, increased CBV, increased OEF, and decreased CMRO2. These findings demonstrated that paradoxical CBF reduction is not always associated with reduction of CPP, but partly includes high- CBFb regions with normal CPP, which has not been described in previous studies.展开更多
基金partly supported by the Molecular Imaging Program, a grant(21591561) from the Ministry of Education,Culture,Sports, Science,and Technology and the Japan Science and Technology Agency,Japanthe Research Promotion Program on Health from the National Institute of Biomedical Innovation,Japana Grant-in-Aid(H21-019 and H21-5) from the Ministry of Health, Welfare,and Labour,Japan
文摘Paradoxical reduction of cerebral blood flow (CBF) after administration of the vasodilator acetazolamide is the most severe stage of cerebrovascular reactivity failure and is often associated with an increased oxygen extraction fraction (OEF). In this study, we aimed to reveal the mechanism underlying this phenomenon by focusing on the ratio of CBF to cerebral blood volume (CBV) as a marker of regional cerebral perfusion pressure (CPP). In 37 patients with unilateral internal carotid or middle cerebral arterial (MCA) steno-occlusive disease and 8 normal controls, the baseline CBF (CBFb), CBV, OEF, cerebral oxygen metabolic rate (CMRO2), and CBF after acetazolamide loading in the anterior and posterior MCA territories were measured by (15)~O positron emission tomography. Paradoxical CBF reduction was found in 28 of 74 regions (18 of 37 patients) in the ipsilateral hemisphere. High CBFb (〉47.6 mL/100 mL/min, n = 7) was associated with normal CBFb/CBV, increased CBV, decreased OEF, and normal CMRO2. Low CBFb (〈31.8 mL/100 mL/min, n = 9) was associated with decreased CBFb/CBV, increased CBV, increased OEF, and decreased CMRO2. These findings demonstrated that paradoxical CBF reduction is not always associated with reduction of CPP, but partly includes high- CBFb regions with normal CPP, which has not been described in previous studies.