Article Text
Abstract
Objectives Automated CT perfusion mismatch assessment is an established treatment decision tool in acute ischemic stroke. However, the reliability of this method in patients with head motion is unclear. We therefore sought to evaluate the influence of head movement on automated CT perfusion mismatch evaluation.
Methods Using a realistic CT brain-perfusion-phantom, 7 perfusion mismatch scenarios were simulated within the left middle cerebral artery territory. Real CT noise and artificial head movement were added. Thereafter, ischemic core, penumbra volumes and mismatch ratios were evaluated using an automated mismatch analysis software (RAPID, iSchemaView) and compared with ground truth simulated values.
Results While CT scanner noise alone had only a minor impact on mismatch evaluation, a tendency towards smaller infarct core estimates (mean difference of −5.3 (−14 to 3.5) mL for subtle head movement and −7.0 (−14.7 to 0.7) mL for strong head movement), larger penumbral estimates (+9.9 (−25 to 44) mL and +35 (−14 to 85) mL, respectively) and consequently larger mismatch ratios (+0.8 (−1.5 to 3.0) for subtle head movement and +1.9 (−1.3 to 5.1) for strong head movement) were noted in dependence of patient head movement.
Conclusions Motion during CT perfusion acquisition influences automated mismatch evaluation. Potentially treatment-relevant changes in mismatch classifications in dependence of head movement were observed and occurred in favor of mechanical thrombectomy.
- CT
- stroke
- CT perfusion
- thrombectomy
Data availability statement
The datasets generated and/or analyzed during this research are available from the corresponding author upon reasonable request.
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Data availability statement
The datasets generated and/or analyzed during this research are available from the corresponding author upon reasonable request.
Footnotes
Contributors AP, MB, SH and MMö initiated the project. AP led the research, conducted the simulations, data acquisition, statistical analysis and wrote the manuscript. MB, SH, MMö were involved in the study design and concept. FS, CW, MMu, CH assisted data acquisition. All authors discussed the results, commented on the paper, and approved the final version of the manuscript.
Funding The authors have not declared a specific grant for this research from any funding agency in the public, commercial or not-for-profit sectors.
Competing interests None declared.
Provenance and peer review Not commissioned; internally peer reviewed.
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