Rare stroke mechanisms in 4154 consecutive patients: causes, predictors, treatment, and outcomes.
Details
Serval ID
serval:BIB_5013A408E468
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
Rare stroke mechanisms in 4154 consecutive patients: causes, predictors, treatment, and outcomes.
Journal
Neurological sciences
ISSN
1590-3478 (Electronic)
ISSN-L
1590-1874
Publication state
Published
Issued date
11/2022
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Volume
43
Number
11
Pages
6359-6369
Language
english
Notes
Publication types: Journal Article
Publication Status: ppublish
Publication Status: ppublish
Abstract
Rare mechanisms of stroke (RMS) in acute ischemic stroke (AIS) have rarely been studied applying a systematic approach. Our aim was to define the frequency, etiologies, predictors, and outcomes of RMS in a consecutive series of AIS.
Data from consecutive patients from 2003 to 2016 were derived from the Acute STroke Registry and Analysis of Lausanne (ASTRAL). Frequency of subcategories of RMS was calculated. In a case-control design, RMS were compared to strokes of all other mechanisms. Outcome was assessed with 3-month Rankin-shift and 12-month mortality and recurrence rates.
Out of 4154 AISs, 222 (5.3%) were found to have a RMS (42.0% female, median age 66 years). The most frequent RMS etiologies were medical interventions (25.6%), active oncological disease (22.5%), and vasculitis (11.7%). In multivariate analysis, RMS patients were younger, had more preceding and bilateral strokes, and a higher admission temperature. They were associated with less traditional risk factors and more systemic disease (such as AIDS, coagulopathy, and cancer). RMS also had more early ischemic changes on plain CT, less revascularization treatments, and more symptomatic hemorrhagic transformations. They presented significantly higher 3-month disability (Rankin-shift-OR <sub>adj</sub> 1.74), 12-month recurrence (OR <sub>adj</sub> 1.99), and mortality rates (OR <sub>adj</sub> 2.41).
RMS occurred in 5.3% of a large population of consecutive AISs and are most frequently related to medical interventions, cancer, and vasculitis. RMS patients have less traditional risk factors but more systemic comorbidities, hemorrhagic transformations, recurrences, and a worse long-term outcome. Identification of RMS has direct implications for early treatment and long-term outcome.
Data from consecutive patients from 2003 to 2016 were derived from the Acute STroke Registry and Analysis of Lausanne (ASTRAL). Frequency of subcategories of RMS was calculated. In a case-control design, RMS were compared to strokes of all other mechanisms. Outcome was assessed with 3-month Rankin-shift and 12-month mortality and recurrence rates.
Out of 4154 AISs, 222 (5.3%) were found to have a RMS (42.0% female, median age 66 years). The most frequent RMS etiologies were medical interventions (25.6%), active oncological disease (22.5%), and vasculitis (11.7%). In multivariate analysis, RMS patients were younger, had more preceding and bilateral strokes, and a higher admission temperature. They were associated with less traditional risk factors and more systemic disease (such as AIDS, coagulopathy, and cancer). RMS also had more early ischemic changes on plain CT, less revascularization treatments, and more symptomatic hemorrhagic transformations. They presented significantly higher 3-month disability (Rankin-shift-OR <sub>adj</sub> 1.74), 12-month recurrence (OR <sub>adj</sub> 1.99), and mortality rates (OR <sub>adj</sub> 2.41).
RMS occurred in 5.3% of a large population of consecutive AISs and are most frequently related to medical interventions, cancer, and vasculitis. RMS patients have less traditional risk factors but more systemic comorbidities, hemorrhagic transformations, recurrences, and a worse long-term outcome. Identification of RMS has direct implications for early treatment and long-term outcome.
Keywords
Humans, Female, Aged, Male, Ischemic Stroke, Retrospective Studies, Stroke/epidemiology, Stroke/therapy, Registries, Risk Factors, Vasculitis, Brain Ischemia/epidemiology, Brain Ischemia/therapy, Treatment Outcome, Ischemic stroke, Rare stroke, Stroke mechanism
Pubmed
Web of science
Open Access
Yes
Create date
29/08/2022 9:02
Last modification date
02/02/2023 7:10