Abstract
SUMMARY: Cerebral hyperperfusion syndrome is a serious complication of endovascular angioplasty and stent placement for long-standing intracranial stenosis, resulting in neurologic dysfunction, seizure, or reperfusion hemorrhage. Rigorous control of blood pressure is commonly used in the perioperative period to prevent cerebral hyperperfusion syndrome, but the optimal blood pressure is often arbitrary. We describe the angiographic features that reflect impaired cerebral autoregulation and microvascular transit abnormality, which may be used to gauge the optimal blood pressure parameters in the immediate postintervention period for prevention of cerebral hyperperfusion syndrome.
ABBREVIATIONS:
- BP
- blood pressure
- CHS
- cerebral hyperperfusion syndrome
- ICAS
- intracranial atherosclerosis
- ICH
- intracranial hemorrhage
Footnotes
Mandeep Ghuman and Anderson Chun On Tsang made equal contributions to the article.
- © 2019 by American Journal of Neuroradiology