BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Patients with acute ischemic stroke receive computed tomography angiogram (CTA) and digital subtraction angiogram (DSA) for clinical evaluation. Current guidelines lack in defining indications for transcranial Doppler (TCD) and/or carotid duplex ultrasonography (CUS) in acute stroke evaluation or follow-up cerebrovascular imaging after reperfusion. We investigated the clinical utility of performing additional TCD/CUS after reperfusion in guiding postacute care stroke management. METHODS: Retrospective review of acute ischemic stroke patients admitted to a comprehensive stroke center with CTA head and neck and/or DSA followed by TCD/CUS. Cases were reviewed by two authors to determine if TCD/CUS provided additional diagnostic information to aid management. A nominal group process, using a third author, achieved consensus in cases of disagreements. RESULTS: Only 25 of 198 patients had CTA or DSA followed by TCD/CUS. Ten (40%) cases showed new clinical information from CUS aiding management. Of those with TCD, 5 patients (22.7%) had findings that impacted management. These clinical scenarios included detection of mobile thrombus requiring anticoagulation; distinguishing carotid near-occlusion from occlusion; confirming hemodynamic significance of intra/extracranial stenosis helping emergent stenting/endarterectomy; detecting hyperperfusion on TCDs causing symptoms; and establishing chronicity of carotid stenosis based on collateral flow patterns, which deferred further intervention. DISCUSSION: Our experience shows that TCD/CUS may offer additional diagnostic information assisting postacute care management in small subset of patients with acute ischemic stroke. Larger studies are needed to research the clinical impact and cost-effectiveness of additional imaging and inform clinical guidelines for selecting patients who will benefit from these additional studies.
Chronic kidney disease (CKD) independently increases the risk of stroke and small vessel disease (SVD). This study compared SVD and a transcranial Doppler (TCD)-based marker of intracranial vascular resistance (pulsatility index, PI) in post-stroke patients with and without CKD. Between January 2015 and December 2017, 118 individuals with stable eGFR (50 with CKD) had cerebral MRI and TCD within three months of a stroke. The means of bilateral PI in anterior (anterior cerebral [ACA] and middle cerebral arteries [MCA]) and posterior vessels (posterior cerebral [PCA] and vertebral arteries [VA]) were computed. CKD strongly correlated with higher distal resistance (median CKD ACA PI 1.2, IQR 1.0 to 1.35 vs. controls 0.91 IQR 0.79 to 1.1 [ p < 0.0001]; median MCA PI 1.14 IQR 1.03 to 1.39 vs. controls 0.93 IQR 0.79 to 1.1 [ p < 0.0001]) and MRI SVD burden (median CKD SVD 4.98 × 104 IQR 2.66 to 7.76 × 104 voxels vs. controls median SVD 6.7 × 103 IQR 2.4 to 24.0 × 103 [ p < 0.0001]). In conclusion, in patients with recent stroke, CKD is an independent determinant of increased intracranial vascular resistance in both anterior and posterior cerebral circulations. MRI SVD volume is significantly associated with anterior and posterior circulation PI.
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