Title: Imaging the TIA Patient
1Imaging the TIA Patient
- Christopher Lewandowski, MD
- Henry Ford Hospital
- May 2009
2Case
- SB is a 57 yo AAF with a past history of DM II
and hyperlipidemia who come to the ED with sudden
onset of R chin, R tongue, and later R sided
numbness. Her R leg felt weak with walking. Onset
-2 hrs PTA - VS 180/90 P-82, RR-16, T-36.5 c
- PE revealed decrease to pinprick on R face, arm,
and leg. Sx resolved shortly after arrival - Now what?
Image the patient
3Purpose of Imaging
- Exclude non-cerebrovascular causes
- of focal neurologic deficits
- Determine if the event was a stroke or a TIA
- Determine the etiology
- cardiogenic, non-cardiogenic
- large vessel disease, small vessel disease
- Treatment Decision
4Treatment Options
- Risk Factor Control
- Antiplatelet
- Anticoagulation
- Carotid endarterectomy (CEA)
- stent (CAS)
- PFO closure
- Intracranial stenosis stent (wingspan)
5What needs to be Imaged
6Non-contrast CT -Head
- AHA Guidelines
- general agreement that patients should receive
a CT scan of the head .. to exclude a rare lesion
such as a subdural hematoma or brain tumor (Class
III, type C). - CT may reveal an area of brain infarction . 29
to 34 of patients. may influence subsequent
management (Class III, type C) - CT of the head has a limited role in
vertebrobasilar TIA (Class III).
Culebras, Stroke 1997 281480-1497
7Utility of the Non-contrast CT-Head
- Douglas 322 pts ED diagnosis of TIA, CTlt48h
- Normal 46
- New infarct 4
- Old stroke 21
- Non-ischemic cause 1.2
- 3-tumors, 1-chronic subdural
- Risk of stroke at 90d 10.9
- Highest risk with new infarct on initial CT
(5/13) - OR 4.06 for stroke in 90d
Douglas VC, Stroke.2003 Dec34(12)2894-8
8Is an MRI better for new infarcts?
- DWI is very sensitive for early ischemia
- Kidwell, 42 patients with TIA
- DWI in 20/42, 48
- DWI patients
- Longer duration of sx (7.3h v 3.2h)
- DWI changed the suspected cause in 33
- Not all DWI lesion evolved into strokes
- 50 reversible
Kidwell, Stroke 1999 301174-1180
9DWI for TIA
- Crisostomo, 75 patients with 78 TIAs
- DWI lt 3days
- 21 (16/78) DWI
- 7/16 DWI pts also on T2 or FLAIR
- DWI pts had
- Sx gt1h
- Motor deficits
- Speech deficits
Crisostomo, Stroke 2003 43932-937
10DWI predicts risk
- Ay, 87 pts admitted with TIA
- DWI 41.3 (36/87)
- DWI 19.4 inpatient risk of recurrent stroke
- Coutts, 120 pts minor stroke or TIA (57.5)
- DWI-, no vessel occl 4.3 90d risk
- DWI, no vessel occl 10.8 90d risk
- DWI, vessel occl, 32.6 90 d risk
Coutts, Ann Neurol 200557848 Ay, Ann Neurol
2005, 57679
11Clinical Score Imaging risk assessment
- Ay, 601 TIA patients, all with MRI
- Clinical score DWI to predict 7d stroke risk
- ABCD2 gt 4 2.0 7d risk
- DWI 4.9 7d risk
- ABCD2 gt 4, DWI 14.9 7d risk
Ay, Stroke 200940181-6
12What About PWI
- Restrepo, 22 pts with TIA and DWI/PWI
- 12 DWI (54)
- 7 PWI (32) (14 only PWI)
- 4 DWI and PWI (18)
- 15 DWI or PWI (68)
- Krol, 69 pts with TIA, 62 had PWI
- 21 PWI (34)
- 12 PWI and sx resolution
- No relation of PWI to clinical outcome
Restrepo, AJNR 2004251645 Krol Stroke 2005
362487-89
13DWI/PWI
- Mlynash, 43 TIA patients
- DWI / PWI within 48 hrs
- PWI 33 (16 only PWI)
- DWI 35
- DWI and PWI 16
- DWI or PWI 51
- PWI lesions more frequent with
- MRIlt12 hrs, speech deficit, lt60 yo
- PWI increases the sensitivity of MRI for ischemia
Mlynash, Neurology 2009 72(13) 1127-33
14DWI
- Precise evaluation of TIA
- 40 of TIA pts have DWI (25-67)
- increased risk of recurrent stroke
- Guides localization and treatment
- Identifies patients to admit
- PWI
- identifies another 3-14 of TIA patients with
ischemia/hypoperfusion, significance uncertain
15Imaging of Vessels in TIAAHA Guidelines
- A noninvasive screening technique is indicated
- carotid duplex or Doppler ultrasonography
- MRA provides noninvasive imaging
- leads to overestimation of degree of arterial
stenosis (Class II) - high-quality MRA
- sufficient vascular overview for
vertebrobasilar ischemia - contrast-enhanced CT scanning ..
- may be helpful as a screening tool in centers
where it is available (Class III) - radiographic arteriography (DSA)
- best defines surgically remediable lesions
- recommended for a symptomatic patient when
noninvasive tests indicate 70 occlusion
16Duplex US
- Anatomic US image Doppler flow velocity
- Carotid lesions are found in 8-31 of TIA pts
17Imaging of the neck
- Doppler US is the standard initial evaluation
- Advantages
- Inexpensive
- Reliably excludes critical stenosis,lt 50
- Disadvantages
- Operator dependant
- Over-estimates stenosis
- Can be limited by severe calcifications
- 88 sensitivity, 76 specificity
18CT Angiogram
- Advantages
- perform with CT-head
- available, accurate
- Images head and neck
- Disadvantages
- cost
- contrast
- radiation
- reformatting
19How good is CT-Angiogram
- Josephson 81 vessels with both CTA and DSA for
stenosis gt70, 2 blinded readers - Agreed on 78/81, 96 95CI90-99
- CT-A 100 sensitive, 63 specific
- NPV of CTA for stenosis gt70 100
- Comparable to MRA
- Wyers 59 pts with 3-D CTA and planned carotid
stent - influenced the planned approach in 37
- reliably identified anatomic contraindications to
CAS without DSA
Josephson, Neurology 200463457-60 Wyers, J Vasc
Surg 2009 49614-22
20What about contrast nephropathy
- Josephson reviewed 1,075 patients that underwent
CT-A and CT-Perfusion - 52 creatinine increased by gt 0.5
- 4 possible renal failure due to contrast
- 2 temporary hemodialysis
Josephson, Neurology 2005641805-6
21MR angiogram
22MRA
- Advantages
- Completed with DWI and entire sequence
- Covers head and neck
- Disadvantages
- Availability, cost
- Patient exclusion, tolerance
- Gadolinium
- Image acquisition time
- MRA
- 92 sensitivity 76 specificity
- CE-MRA
- 94 sensitivity 93 specificity
23DUS, MRA, DSAWhich one when?
- Busken 350 pts with DUS, MRA, and DSA
- DSA gold standard
- DUS
- 88 sensitive 76 specific
- MRA
- 92 sensitive 76 specific
- Strategy of DUS, then MRA
- 96 sensitive 80 specific
- DUS alone was the most efficient strategy, adding
MRA as necessary
Busken, Radiology 2004233101-112
24What is the best strategy
- Wardlaw,
- Can DUS, CTA, MRA, or CE-MRA replace DSA
- Literature review with expert panel
- 41 studies, 2404 pts, 22 different strategies
- For 70-99 Stenosis
- CE-MRA most accurate 94 sens, 93 specific
- DUS, CTA, MRA all similar
- 89 sens, 84 specific
- For 50-69 Stenosis
- Literature overestimates accuracy because the
sensitivity/specificity is better in asymptomatic
arteries - 1st DUS, confirm with CE-MRA
Wardlaw JM, Health Technol Asses 2006301-182
25What do vascular surgeons do?
- Long 2002, survey of 382 vascular surgeons in
France, 9390 stenoses - Decision for surgery based on
- DUS DSA 69
- DUS MRA 14
- DUS CTA 9
- DUS alone 8
Long, Ann Vasc Surg 2002 16261-5
26What about Intracranial (IC) Stenosis
- Transcranial Doppler TCD
- Advantages
- Noninvasive, easy to perform
- Disadvantages
- operator dependant
- Rely on appropriate
- bone windows
27TCD for IC Stenosis
- Feldmann 407 pts, SONIA Trial
- All patients with TCD, MRA, DSA
- TCD 50 PPV, 85 NPV
- MRA 66 PPV, 87 NPV
- Low incidence of IC stenosis
- TCD provides similar information as MRA
- Zubkov 93 pts with AIS,
- CTA found 10 occlusions, 22 stenosis (EC/IC)
- Good correlation with DUS
- CTA demonstrates IC stenosis better than TCD
Feldmann, Neurology 2007682099-2106 Zubkov,
Neurol Res, 20088835-8
28What if you do find a IC stenosis
- WASID study
- IC stenosis gt50 after TIA or minor stroke
- 90d risk of Stroke - 4.7
- 90d risk of TIA - 6.9
- After TIA alone
- 60 (15/25) events occur w/in 90 days
- Treatment
- Antiplatelet agents
- stent under study (Wingspan)
Ovbiagele, Arch Neurol 2008 65(6)733-7
29Imaging the Heart ECG
- ECG Primarily for dx of Atrial Fibrillation
- Christensen ECG of 233 TIA pts
- Abnormal in 44 (ectopic beats and AV block)
- No ECG finding was assoc with poor outcome or
mortality - Elkins 1327 pts ED dx of TIA and ECG
- 2.3 with new AF
- 4.2 with abnormal ECGs had cardiac events
- Abn ECG LVH, AF, AV conduction delays
- Cardiac event AMI, CHF, Arrhythmia, ACS
- vs 0.6 with normal ECGs (OR 6.9 1.6-29.5)
- No increase risk of stroke or death with abnormal
ECG
Christensen, J Neurol Sci 200523499-103 Elkins,
Arch Neurol 2002591437-41
30Cardiac Monitoring
- Purpose is to find Paroxysmal Atrial Fib
- Jabaudon 149 pts with stroke or TIA
- ECG for AF 2.7 - on day 1 (4/149)
- 4.1 - by day 5 (6/145)
- 24 hr Holter 5 w AF (7/139)
- 7d ELR 5.7 w AF (5/88)
- Tayal 56 pts- cryptogenic stroke
- 21 d of OPD monitoring, 23 w AF
- AF detected 7-21 days, 0 lt 7 d
- Low yield in general, consider longer monitoring
if cardioembolic cause suspected
Jabaudon, Stroke 2004351647-1651 Tayal,
Neurology 2008, 181696-701
31EchocardiographyA traditional part of the TIA
evaluation
- 3 yield in unselected patients
- Suspect cardiac source
- Young patients
- No large vessel source or
- no small vessel disease
- Known cardiac disease
- AF (atrial thrombi)
- valvular disease, valve replaced
- Dilated cardiomyopathy
- Endocarditis
- TEE gtgt TTE for
- Aortic arch atheroma
- Atrial thrombi
- Valvular disease
- R to L shunts (PFO)
32Transesophageal Echocardiography
- Force 132 pts with TIA / minor stroke
- 70 -known cause, 62 cryptogenic
- TEE Positive for PFO/ASA in
- 3 w known cause
- 19 w cryptogenic
- deBruijn TEE gtTTE
- 231 TIA patients, both TTE TEE
- 55 (127/231) potential source
- 39 (90/321) only on TEE
- 40 of pts with (-) TTE had ()TEE
Force, Clin Neirol Neurosurg 2008110779-83 deBru
ijn, Stroke 2006 372531-2534
33SummarySimple and Rapid approach
- SOS-TIA (Lancet Neurlogy Nov 20076953-960)
- MRI or CT, DUS, EKG, TTE or TEE as needed
- 90d stroke risk 1.24
- EXPRESS (Lancet 2007369254-55)
- CT, ECG, DUS, TTE or TEE as needed
- 90d stroke risk 2.1
- EDOU (Stead, Neurocrit Care, 2008)
- CT, EKG, DUS,
- neurology consult with further testing as needed
- 90d stroke risk 2.4
- 80 Risk reduction
34SummaryWhat do you need to do
- Do something, and do it quickly
- Brain imaging CT or MRI
- Connect to CTA or MRA if possible
- Vascular imaging DUS
- Cardiac Imaging ECG, monitor
- TEE or TTE as indicated
35Back to the Case
- ECG- normal
- Monitor NSR
- CT normal
- DWI
- MRA normal
- TEE normal
- Discharged
- ASA, Simvistatin, glucatrol
36Stroke, 2009 June 402276-2293