A1 Refereed original research article in a scientific journal

Regional cerebral blood flow measurement with iodine-123-IMP autoradiography: Normal values, reproducibility and sensitivity to hypoperfusion




AuthorsHatazawa J, Iida H, Shimosegawa E, Sato T, Murakami M, Miura Y

PublisherSOC NUCLEAR MEDICINE INC

Publication year1997

JournalJournal of Nuclear Medicine

Journal name in sourceJOURNAL OF NUCLEAR MEDICINE

Journal acronymJ NUCL MED

Volume38

Issue7

First page 1102

Last page1108

Number of pages7

ISSN0161-5505


Abstract
We recently proposed a simplified technique for measuring regional cerebral blood flow (rCBF) using the [I-123]N-isopropyl-p-iodoamphetamine (IMP) autoradiographic (ARG) method with SPECT (the IMP-ARG method). We examined normal values of rCBF and the reproducibility and sensitivity to hypoperfusion in stroke patients using this method. Methods: By using a standard arterial input, a single static scan, a fixed distribution volume (V-d) and one-point arterial blood sampling, we measured rCBF in 39 normal volunteers (19 men and 20 women; mean ages 61 +/- 11 yr for the men and 60 +/- 12 yr for the women). Eighteen neurologically stable patients with prior stroke (mean age = 65 +/- 11 yr) were studied twice at a mean interval of 97 days. In 16 patients (7 men and 9 women, mean age = 63 +/- 5 yr) with subarachnoid hemorrhage, rCBF was measured 1-2 wk after onset. Cerebral vasospasm was evaluated by repeated angiography. The mean rCBF in the vasospastic area was compared with that in a nonvasospastic area. Results: The mean rCBFs of the cerebral cortex and centrum semiovale in the volunteers were 33.0 +/- 5.1 ml/100 g/min and 25.0 +/- 4.5 ml/100 g/min, respectively. There was no age-dependent change in rCBF, but the women showed significantly higher cortical rCBF than the men (p < 0.05). In the stroke patients, the whole-brain CBF values showed high reproducibility, with high correlations between those obtained at the first and second studies (y = -3.5 + 1.03x; r = 0.90; p < 0.001). In the subarachnoid hemorrhage patients, the vasospastic area showed significantly lower rCBF than the normal cortical rCBF (p < 0.01) and the nonvasospastic area (p < 0.01). Brain regions with rCBF levels below 20 ml/100 g/min showed infarction on the follow-up CT scan. Conclusion: The IMP-ARG method is reproducible, sensitive to hypoperfusion and feasible for the quantitative evaluation of rCBF in routine clinical practice.



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