Wang W C, Gallagher D M, Pegelow C H, Wright E C, Vichinsky E P, Abboud M R, Moser F G, Adams R J
St. Jude Children's Research Hospital, Memphis, Tennessee, USA.
J Pediatr Hematol Oncol. 2000 Jul-Aug;22(4):335-9. doi: 10.1097/00043426-200007000-00010.
To compare the results of standardized magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) of the brain and transcranial Doppler (TCD) ultrasonography of cerebral arteries in school-aged children with sickle cell disease to determine the correlation between these two different neurodiagnostic tests.
Data were analyzed from 78 children with sickle cell disease (mean age 11 yrs) who participated in both the Cooperative Study of Sickle Cell Disease (CSSCD) and the Stroke Prevention Trial in Sickle Cell Anemia (STOP). Patients who had experienced an overt stroke were excluded. MRI findings were classified as normal or "silent infarct." Results of TCD were classified as normal, conditional, or abnormal, based on the time-averaged maximum mean flow velocity in the proximal middle cerebral and distal internal carotid arteries.
Of 61 patients who had a normal MRI examination, 11 (18%) had either conditional (5 patients) or abnormal (6 patients) TCD results. Among 17 patients in whom silent infarction was seen on MRI, only 5 (29%) had a conditional (1 patient) or abnormal (4 patients) TCD velocity. Thus, discordant results were seen in 23 patients: 12 in which the TCD result was normal and the MRI abnormal; 11 in which the TCD velocity was elevated and the MRI normal.
Abnormal TCD and MRI examinations reveal different aspects of the pathophysiology of central nervous system (CNS) injury in sickle cell disease and are often discordant. Although TCD abnormality is predictive of overt stroke, the lack of concordance between TCD and MRI findings suggests a need to develop more sensitive and specific indicators of early CNS pathology, such as neuropsychometric testing and positron-emission tomography (PET) scans, and to obtain more information about microvascular pathologic processes that may affect CNS function.
比较镰状细胞病学龄儿童的标准化脑部磁共振成像(MRI)结果与脑动脉经颅多普勒(TCD)超声检查结果,以确定这两种不同神经诊断测试之间的相关性。
分析了78例镰状细胞病患儿(平均年龄11岁)的数据,这些患儿同时参与了镰状细胞病合作研究(CSSCD)和镰状细胞贫血中风预防试验(STOP)。排除有明显中风病史的患者。MRI结果分为正常或“无症状性梗死”。根据大脑中动脉近端和颈内动脉远端的时间平均最大平均流速,将TCD结果分为正常、临界或异常。
在61例MRI检查正常的患者中,11例(18%)TCD结果为临界(5例)或异常(6例)。在17例MRI显示无症状性梗死的患者中,只有5例(29%)TCD流速为临界(1例)或异常(4例)。因此,23例患者出现了不一致的结果:12例TCD结果正常而MRI异常;11例TCD流速升高而MRI正常。
异常的TCD和MRI检查揭示了镰状细胞病中枢神经系统(CNS)损伤病理生理学的不同方面,且常常不一致。虽然TCD异常可预测明显中风,但TCD与MRI结果缺乏一致性表明,需要开发更敏感和特异的早期CNS病理学指标,如神经心理测试和正电子发射断层扫描(PET),并获取更多关于可能影响CNS功能的微血管病理过程的信息。