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Advanced CT/MR Imaging for Stroke Patient Treatment Selection State of the Art and Future Directions, Dr. Michael H. Lev (9-1-22)

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Hello and welcome to Noon conference hosted by MRI online. Noon Conference

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Today we're honored to welcome Dr. Michael Lev for a lecture on advanced

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CT MR imaging for stroke patient treatment selection, state of the art and

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future directions. Dr. Lev is a director of emergency radiology and emergency

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neuro radiology at Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston and a professor

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of radiology at Harvard Medical School. He has been an attending radiologist

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at MGH since 1995 and as a board certified in both internal medicine

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and radiology with a certificate of added qualification and neuro radiology.

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Dr. Lev is an elected fellow of both the American Heart Association and

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the American College of radiology. At the end of the lecture join Dr.

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Lev in a Q&A session where he will answer any questions you may

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have on today's topic. With that being said, we're ready to begin today's

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lecture, Dr. Lev, please take it from here.

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Welcome everyone. I will be speaking today on

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advanced CT MR imaging for stroke patient treatment selection,

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and I'm going to do a little bit of a how to and

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where we are right now, as well as talk about

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future directions. So, these are my disclosures, and I want to let everyone

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know I'm actually speaking live from Geneva, Switzerland, I am at a photon

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counting CT meeting at the large hadron collider at CERN,

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home of the Higgs boson, and I'm here with several of my mass

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general Brigham colleagues as well as over 100 other

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scientists and engineers who are working on this next generation of CT scanning.

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It would be interesting to see over the next couple of years how

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this pans out but I think that I could summarize the whole meeting

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by saying everything that I'm going to be discussing today

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we'll probably be able to do in the future using photon counting CT

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faster at higher spatial resolution, at higher contrast resolution, and

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with the ability to do material decomposition and distinguish

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different tissues, so more to come on that.

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Much of what I'm going to speak about in terms of current state

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of the art and how to can be found in this

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monograph issue paper on stroke code imaging that

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we wrote with Chris Potter and the group.

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And basically, stroke is a clinical syndrome, and we like to divide it

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up into different differential diagnoses and different age groups and the

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cut point for adult versus young adult is about age 40

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in adults, certainly cardioembolic stroke from AFib is very important.

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We're seeing probably fewer and fewer new onset large vessel strokes meaning

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carotid artery extra cranial to intracranial embolus, just because we're

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getting so good at screening for those and then treating them preventively.

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And up to 20% of all strokes fall into the other or uncertain

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category, and a big chunk of those are usually due to disease at the

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great vessel origins. Under the age of 40 when you're looking for stroke,

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you want to look for certain keywords. You're much less likely in the

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young adult and adolescent age group to have Atheromatous causes or A fib

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as a cause of stroke. But if you ever hear the word yoga

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chiropractor weightlifting, then you should definitely be thinking about

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dissection. If you hear about someone who has just taken a 10 hour

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plane flight and stands up as they're getting off and suddenly becomes hemiparetic

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or aesthesic, then think about a DBT with a paradoxical convalesce through

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a PFO. It's almost impossible to predict ahead of time if someone's going

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to go into a fib get turbulent flow cause a clot in the

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left atrium or left atrial appendage and have that clot travel up into

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the brain, but there are some clues on a CT scan,

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if the AP left atrial diameter at the maximum level is about four to

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five millimeters or greater, then there's a pretty good chance you'll be

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in a fib and usually over five, and you're almost certainly going to have

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some type of atrial arrhythmia. There's actually clues to that on plain

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film as well, and probably the most important is the carinal angle. And

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normally the carinal angle is anywhere from 45 to about 90 or 100

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degrees. Certainly if it's much over 100 degrees and flattened out here,

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it means the left atrium is pushing up on the Carina and is

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probably enlarged to the point where atrial fibrillation is possible.

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Now, the single biggest take home message from today's talk is that diffusion

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weighted imaging is the reference standard for acute infarction detection,

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and what that means is that once you see true restricted diffusion and

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something bright on DWI in the setting of an acute onset of a

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clinical deficit, it pretty much is irreversible and even if you were to

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reperfuse that tissue or recanalize that occluded middle cerebral artery

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or anterior cerebral artery or Basilar artery acutely, there probably still

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be some neuronal damage on a follow up scan and

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one to...

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Faculty

Michael H. Lev, MD, FACR

Director of Emergency Radiology and Emergency Neuroradiology, Professor of Radiology

Massachusetts General Hospital, Harvard Medical School

Tags

Vascular Imaging

Vascular

Neuroradiology

Neuro

Head and Neck

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