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  • Title: Evaluation of cerebral vasomotor reactivity by various vasodilating stimuli: comparison of CO2 to acetazolamide.
    Author: Ringelstein EB, Van Eyck S, Mertens I.
    Journal: J Cereb Blood Flow Metab; 1992 Jan; 12(1):162-8. PubMed ID: 1727137.
    Abstract:
    To evaluate the role of different vasomotor stimuli for the measurement of cerebrovascular vasomotor reactivity (VMR), 47 patients (i.e., 93 hemispheres) with various degrees of internal carotid artery (ICA) occlusive disease were studied. Patients were divided into clinical [asymptomatic, transient ischemic attack (TIA) or completed stroke] as well as angiological subgroups. Low-grade or high-grade unilateral ICA lesions were compared to bilateral ICA occlusive disease. Relative flow velocity changes within the middle cerebral artery were measured by means of transcranial Doppler during hyper- and hypocapnia (VMRTOT), during hypercapnia alone (VMRCO2), and after injection of 1 g acetazolamide (VMRACE). VMR was expressed as the percentage change in flow velocity after stimulus application as compared with flow velocity at rest. There was a close and statistically highly significant correlation of CO2-induced with acetazolamide-induced VMR (r = 0.69 in VMRTOT versus VMRACE and 0.79 in VMRCO2 versus VMRACE; P less than 0.0001; linear regression), indicating a strong similarity of the vasodilatative effects of CO2 and acetazolamide on cerebral arteries. Both stimulation techniques highly significantly differentiated between asymptomatic patients and those with TIA or completed stroke. Angiological subgroups were separated best by the acetazolamide test. Reclassification of patients into angiological subgroups by linear discriminant analysis was equally good with all three methods. We conclude that both acetazolamide- and CO2-induced stimulation of the cerebral vasomotors are valid techniques to measure reduction in perfusion reserve due to extracranial cerebrovascular occlusive disease.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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