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  • Title: [Regional cerebral blood flow (rCBF) in patients with ruptured cerebral aneurysm: site of aneurysm and rCBF].
    Author: Yamakami I, Isobe K, Ono J, Suda S, Oka Y, Tanno H, Yamaura A, Sunada S.
    Journal: No Shinkei Geka; 1986 Aug; 14(9):1079-84. PubMed ID: 3774096.
    Abstract:
    To investigate the relationship between the site of ruptured cerebral aneurysm and rCBF, 92 measurements of rCBF were conducted in 57 patients with ruptured cerebral aneurysm. Excluded from this study were patients with multiple aneurysms, intracerebral hematoma, and/or hydrocephalus. Twenty-four patients had the anterior communicating aneurysm (A-com), 20 patients had the internal carotid aneurysm (ICA), and 13 patients had the middle cerebral aneurysm (MCA). All patients underwent unilateral fronto-temporal craniotomy for clipping of the aneurysm and their rCBF measurements, using the xenon-133 inhalation method, were performed in the first three weeks after surgery. In each rCBF measurement, the hemispheric mean value of initial slope index (meanISI) was calculated in both cerebral hemispheres, that is, in the cerebral hemispheres ipsilateral and contralateral to craniotomy. The authors defined the "symmetry index of the meanISI (%): symmetry index" as the ratio of the meanISI in the cerebral hemisphere ipsilateral to craniotomy compared to the meanISI in the cerebral hemisphere contralateral to craniotomy. There was no significant relationship between the site of aneurysm and the meanISI in both hemispheres, and this result suggests that the site of aneurysm makes no difference in the incidence of vasospasm. In the postoperative first week, the "symmetry index" was 91.2 +/- 7.4% in MCA, 95.3 +/- 4.1% in ICA, and 97.9 +/- 8.2% in A-com; that is, MCA had significant asymmetry of meanCBF compared with A-com (p less than 0.05). In the second and third postoperative weeks, there was no significant relationship between the site of aneurysm and the asymmetry of meanCBF.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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