Background:
Large-vessel
atherosclerotic disease is an important pathogenesis of deep-perforator
infarction (DPI). However, altered vessel walls of intracranial large
arteries and distribution of small arteries in DPI are unclear because
of the limited resolution of current imaging techniques. In this study
the intracranial plaque burden and lenticulostriate artery (LSA)
distribution in patients with recent DPI and non-DPI using whole-brain
vessel-wall imaging (WB-VWI) were investigated.
Methods:
A
total of 44 patients with recent DPI (23 patients) or non-DPI (21
patients) due to intracranial atherosclerotic disease were prospectively
enrolled. WB-VWI was performed in all the patients using a
three-dimensional T1-weighted vessel-wall magnetic resonance technique.
Hemispheres with DPI and non-DPI were considered as the DPI group and
non-DPI group, respectively. Hemispheres without a history of stroke
were the control group. The intracranial plaque burden was compared
between the DPI and non-DPI groups. The number and length of visualized
LSA branches among DPI, non-DPI, and control groups were also evaluated.
Results:
A
total of 77 hemispheres were analyzed (23 in the DPI group, 21 in the
non-DPI group, and 33 in the control group). Plaque burden was lower (
p = 0.047) in the DPI group (82.0 ± 45.9 mm
3) compared with the non-DPI group (130.9 ± 90.3 mm
3). There was a significant reduction (
p
= 0.002) in length of visualized LSA branches in the DPI group (74.1 ±
21.7 mm) compared with the control group (104.6 ± 33.3 mm).
Conclusions:
WB-VWI
enables the combination of vessel-wall and LSA imaging in one image
setting, which can provide information about plaque burden and LSA
distribution.
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