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Cho, Hyungjoon
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MRI investigation of vascular remodeling for heterogeneous edema lesions in subacute ischemic stroke rat models: Correspondence between cerebral vessel structure and function

Author(s)
Kang, MungSooJin, SeokhaCho, Hyungjoon
Issued Date
2021-12
DOI
10.1177/0271678X211029197
URI
https://scholarworks.unist.ac.kr/handle/201301/53199
Fulltext
https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/0271678X211029197
Citation
JOURNAL OF CEREBRAL BLOOD FLOW AND METABOLISM, v.4, no.12, pp.3273 - 3287
Abstract
The spatial heterogeneity in the temporal occurrence of pseudo-normalization of MR apparent diffusion coefficient values for ischemic lesions may be related to morphological and functional vascular remodeling. As the area of accelerated pseudo-normalization tends to expand faster and more extensively into the chronic stage, detailed vascular characterization of such areas is necessary. During the subacute stage of transient middle cerebral artery occlusion rat models, the morphological size of the macrovasculature, microvascular vessel size index (VSI), and microvessel density (MVD) were quantified along with functional perfusion measurements of the relative cerebral blood flow (rCBF) and mean transit time (rMTT) of the corresponding areas (33 cases for each parameter). When compared with typical pseudo-normalization lesions, early pseudo-normalization lesions exhibited larger VSI and rCBF (p < 0.001) at reperfusion days 4 and 7, along with reduced MVD and elongated rMTT (p < 0.001) at reperfusion days 1, 4, and 7. The group median VSI and rCBF exhibited a strong positive correlation (r = 0.92), and the corresponding MVD and rMTT showed a negative correlation (r = -0.48). Light sheet fluorescence microscopy images were used to quantitatively validate the corresponding MRI-derived microvascular size, density, and cerebral blood volume.
Publisher
SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
ISSN
0271-678X
Keyword (Author)
Ischemic strokemicrovessel densityperfusion magnetic resonance imagingvascular remodelingvessel size index
Keyword
POSTISCHEMIC HYPERPERFUSIONBRAIN ANGIOGENESISCAPILLARY DENSITYTIME-COURSEBLOOD-FLOWDIFFUSIONSIZERECOVERY

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