Reineck Lora A, Agarwal Sachin, Hillis Argye E
Department of Neurology, Bloomberg School of Public Health, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD 21287, USA.
Neurology. 2005 Mar 8;64(5):828-33. doi: 10.1212/01.WNL.0000152983.52869.51.
Diffusion-perfusion mismatch (perfusion-weighted imaging [PWI] abnormality minus diffusion-weighted imaging [DWI] abnormality) can identify candidates for acute stroke intervention, but PWI is often not obtainable. The authors hypothesized that language tests can predict volume of hypoperfusion, and thus mismatch, in acute left hemisphere stroke, and that the estimated mismatch can predict potential for early recovery of language.
A consecutive series of 81 patients with acute left hemisphere ischemic stroke underwent language testing within 1 day of MRI scans. Volumes of abnormality on PWI and DWI were measured without knowledge of language scores. Using tests that correlated well with PWI abnormality (oral naming and repetition), the authors computed an estimated PWI abnormality (ePWI) for each patient from a linear regression model and derived a diffusion-clinical percent mismatch ([ePWI-DWI/ePWI] x 100). The authors then tested the hypothesis that patients with > or =20% diffusion-clinical mismatch have a greater chance of short-term improvement in language by examining scores of the 23 patients with repeat testing within 1 week.
Within-group comparisons: patients with > or =20% diffusion-clinical mismatch showed improvement in total language score within 1 week (Wilcoxon signed rank: p < 0.02), whereas patients without mismatch did not. Across-group comparison: patients with > or =20% mismatch showed more short-term improvement in language scores than those without mismatch (Mann-Whitney U: p < 0.05).
Tests of oral naming or repetition can be used in patients with acute left hemisphere stroke to estimate perfusion-weighted imaging abnormality and compute a diffusion-clinical mismatch that may predict potential for short-term language improvement.
弥散灌注不匹配(灌注加权成像[PWI]异常减去弥散加权成像[DWI]异常)可识别急性卒中干预的候选者,但PWI往往无法获得。作者推测语言测试可预测急性左半球卒中的低灌注体积,进而预测不匹配情况,且估计的不匹配可预测语言早期恢复的可能性。
连续81例急性左半球缺血性卒中患者在MRI扫描后1天内接受语言测试。在不知道语言分数的情况下测量PWI和DWI上的异常体积。作者使用与PWI异常相关性良好的测试(口语命名和复述),通过线性回归模型为每位患者计算估计的PWI异常(ePWI),并得出弥散-临床百分比不匹配([ePWI-DWI/ePWI]×100)。然后,作者通过检查在1周内进行重复测试的23例患者的分数,检验弥散-临床不匹配≥20%的患者短期语言改善机会更大这一假设。
组内比较:弥散-临床不匹配≥20%的患者在1周内总语言分数有所改善(Wilcoxon符号秩检验:p<0.02),而无不匹配的患者则没有。组间比较:不匹配≥20%的患者在语言分数上的短期改善比无不匹配的患者更多(Mann-Whitney U检验:p<0.05)。
口语命名或复述测试可用于急性左半球卒中患者,以估计灌注加权成像异常并计算弥散-临床不匹配,这可能预测短期语言改善的可能性。