Computed tomography grey-white matter ratio at the basal ganglia level in a reference population for hypoxic ischaemic encephalopathy after cardiac arrest - A cross-sectional observational study.
Margareta Lang, Martin Kenda, Mikael Johnsson, Christoph Leithner, Tobias Cronberg, Susann Ullén, Marion Moseby-Knappe, Niklas Nielsen, Johan Wassélius
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Introduction: A grey-white matter ratio (GWR) < 1.10 at the basal ganglia level on head computed tomography (CT) previously predicted poor outcome with high specificity and moderate sensitivity in cardiac arrest patients. Data on GWR in reference populations are lacking. We explored GWR in a reference group to a cardiac arrest population and hypothesised that none would have GWR < 1.10.
Methods: A retrospective cross-sectional single-centre study. Patients with CT for suspected stroke or transient ischaemic attack were screened between January-August 2021 and included based on matching age and sex to cardiac arrest populations. CTs with pathologic findings were excluded. Circular regions of interest (ROIs) of 0.1 and 0.2 cm2 were placed by three raters at the basal ganglia level and GWR was calculated. Bland-Altman plots estimated interrater variability of GWR from 0.1 and 0.2 cm2 ROIs.
Results: 155 participants were included. The mean age was 75 years, and 59 % were male. No measurement resulted in GWR < 1.10. Median GWR for all raters ranged between 1.30-1.32 in 0.1 cm2 ROIs and 1.27-1.32 in 0.2 cm2 ROIs. The lower and upper limits of agreement between raters were around 0.1. The 0.2 cm2 ROIs GWR achieved smaller limits of agreement compared to the 0.1 cm2 ROIs GWR. Attenuation measurements and GWR differed depending on ROI size used.
Conclusion: A GWR at the basal ganglia level below 1.10 is very unlikely in elderly patients without HIE, suggesting that this may provide a relevant cut-off for HIE prognostication in cardiac arrest patients.
期刊介绍:
Resuscitation is a monthly international and interdisciplinary medical journal. The papers published deal with the aetiology, pathophysiology and prevention of cardiac arrest, resuscitation training, clinical resuscitation, and experimental resuscitation research, although papers relating to animal studies will be published only if they are of exceptional interest and related directly to clinical cardiopulmonary resuscitation. Papers relating to trauma are published occasionally but the majority of these concern traumatic cardiac arrest.