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Cerebral perfusion characteristics show differences in younger versus older children with sickle cell anaemia: Results from a multiple‐inflow‐time arterial spin labelling study
Authors:Jamie M. Kawadler  Simon Barker  Timothy C. S. Cox  Chris A. Clark
Affiliation:1. Developmental Neurosciences, UCL Great Ormond Street Institute of Child Health, London, UKJamie M. Kawadler and Patrick W. Hales contributed equally to this work.;2. Wessex Neurological Centre and Child Health, University Hospital Southampton, Southampton, UK;3. Department of Radiology, Great Ormond Street Hospital, London, UK
Abstract:Sickle cell anaemia (SCA) is associated with chronic anaemia and oxygen desaturation, which elevate cerebral blood flow (CBF) and increase the risk of neurocognitive complications. Arterial spin labelling (ASL) provides a methodology for measuring CBF non‐invasively; however, ASL techniques using only a single inflow time are not sufficient to fully characterize abnormal haemodynamic behaviour in SCA. This study investigated haemodynamic parameters from a multi‐inflow‐time ASL acquisition in younger (8–12 years) and older (13–18 years) children with SCA with and without silent cerebral infarction (SCI+/?) (n = 20 and 19 respectively, 6 and 4 SCI+ respectively) and healthy controls (n = 9 and 7 respectively). Compared with controls, CBF was elevated globally in both groups of patients. In the younger SCA patients, blood oxygen content was negatively correlated with CBF in the middle and posterior cerebral artery territories and significantly positively correlated with bolus arrival time (BAT) in the anterior and middle cerebral artery territories. In older children, SCA patients had significantly shorter BAT than healthy controls and there was a significant negative correlation between CBF and oxygen content only in the territory of the posterior cerebral artery, with a trend for a correlation in the anterior cerebral artery but no relationship for the middle cerebral artery territory. In the younger group, SCI+ patients had significantly higher CBF in the posterior cerebral artery territory (SCI+ mean = 92.78 ml/100 g/min; SCI? mean = 72.71 ml/100 g/min; F = 4.28, p = 0.04), but this no longer reached significance when two children with abnormal transcranial Doppler and one with haemoglobin SC disease were excluded, and there were no significant differences between patients with and without SCI in the older children. With age, there appears to be increasing disparity between patients and controls in terms of the relationship between CBF and oxygen content in the anterior circulation, potentially predicting the risk of acute and chronic compromise of brain tissue.
Keywords:arterial spin labelling  cerebral blood flow  cerebral circulation  cerebral haemodynamics  posterior circulation  sickle cell anaemia
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