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- Paula L Croal, Jackie Leung, Przemyslaw Kosinski, Manohar Shroff, Isaac Odame, and Andrea Kassner.
- Physiology & Experimental Medicine The Hospital for Sick Children Toronto ON Canada.
- Brain Behav. 2017 Nov 1; 7 (11): e00811.
IntroductionTranscranial Doppler ultrasonography (TCD) is a clinical tool for stratifying ischemic stroke risk by identifying abnormal elevations in blood flow velocity (BFV) in the middle cerebral artery (MCA). However, TCD is not effective at screening for subtle neurologic injury such as silent cerebral infarcts. To better understand this disparity, we compared TCD measures of BFV with tissue-level cerebral blood flow (CBF) using arterial spin-labeling MRI in children with and without sickle cell disease, and correlated these measurements against clinical hematologic measures of disease severity.MethodsTCD and MRI assessment were performed in 13 pediatric sickle cell disease patients and eight age-matched controls. Using MRI measures of MCA diameter and territory weight, TCD measures of BFV in the MCA [cm/s] were converted into units of CBF [ml min-1100 g-1] for comparison.ResultsThere was no significant association between TCD measures of BFV in the MCA and corresponding MRI measures of CBF in patients (r = .28, p = .39) or controls (r = .10, p = .81). After conversion from BFV into units of CBF, a strong association was observed between TCD and MRI measures (r = .67, p = .017 in patients, r = .86, p = .006 in controls). While BFV in the MCA showed a lack of correlation with arterial oxygen content, an inverse association was observed for CBF measurements.ConclusionsThis study demonstrates that BFV in the MCA cannot be used as a surrogate marker for tissue-level CBF in children with sickle cell disease. Therefore, TCD alone may not be sufficient for understanding and predicting subtle pathophysiology in this population, highlighting the potential clinical value of tissue-level CBF.
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