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Plaque Distribution and Characteristics in Low-Grade Middle Cerebral Artery Stenosis and Its Clinical Relevance: A 3-Dimensional High-Resolution Magnetic Resonance Imaging Study.

OBJECTIVES: The significance of atherosclerotic plaques in the parental artery with low-grade stenosis remains undetermined. We used three-dimensional high-resolution magnetic resonance imaging (3D HR-MRI) to investigate plaque distribution and characteristics of low-grade middle cerebral artery (MCA) stenosis and its clinical relevance with stroke events.

METHODS: We retrospectively studied 22 symptomatic patients and 24 asymptomatic patients with low-grade MCA stenosis (<50%). By 3D HR-MRI, each identified plaque was classified as either culprit (plaque on the ipsilateral side of a stroke) or nonculprit (plaques in asymptomatic patients or not within the vascular territory of a stroke). Plaque enhancement grades and distribution were assessed and compared between the groups. The association between plaque enhancement and distribution and ischemic stroke was evaluated.

RESULTS: We identified 22 culprit plaques and 31 nonculprit plaques. More culprit plaques showed contrast enhancement compared to the nonculprit plaques (95.5% versus 29.0%, P <.001). Culprit plaques were more frequently superiorly distributed than the nonculprit plaques (46.9% versus 17.5%, P <.01). Contrast enhancement (odds ratio [OR] 17.0, 95% confidence interval [CI] 3.7-77.4) and superior distribution (OR 4.2, 95% CI 1.4-12.1) of a plaque were associated with a recent ischemic stroke, of which single subcortical infarctions accounted for the largest percentage (50%).

CONCLUSIONS: Contrast enhancement and superior distribution may serve as indicators of culprit plaques in low-grade MCA stenosis, and they were significantly related to a recent ischemic stroke.

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