| Literature DB >> 15349866 |
Louis R Caplan1, Robert J Wityk, Thomas A Glass, Jorge Tapia, Ladislav Pazdera, Hui-Meng Chang, Phillip Teal, John F Dashe, Claudia J Chaves, Joan C Breen, Kostas Vemmos, Pierre Amarenco, Barbara Tettenborn, Megan Leary, Conrad Estol, L Dana Dewitt, Michael S Pessin.
Abstract
Among 407 New England Medical Center Posterior Circulation registry patients, 59% had strokes without transient ischemic attacks (TIAs), 24% had TIAs then strokes, and 16% had only TIAs. Embolism was the commonest stroke mechanism (40% of patients including 24% cardiac origin, 14% intraarterial, 2% cardiac and arterial sources). In 32% large artery occlusive lesions caused hemodynamic brain ischemia. Infarcts most often included the distal posterior circulation territory (rostral brainstem, superior cerebellum and occipital and temporal lobes); the proximal (medulla and posterior inferior cerebellum) and middle (pons and anterior inferior cerebellum) territories were equally involved. Severe occlusive lesions (>50% stenosis) involved more than one large artery in 148 patients; 134 had one artery site involved unilaterally or bilaterally. The commonest occlusive sites were: extracranial vertebral artery (52 patients, 15 bilateral) intracranial vertebral artery (40 patients, 12 bilateral), basilar artery (46 patients). Intraarterial embolism was the commonest mechanism of brain infarction in patients with vertebral artery occlusive disease. Thirty-day mortality was 3.6%. Embolic mechanism, distal territory location, and basilar artery occlusive disease carried the poorest prognosis. The best outcome was in patients who had multiple arterial occlusive sites; they had position-sensitive TIAs during months to years.Entities:
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Year: 2004 PMID: 15349866 DOI: 10.1002/ana.20204
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ann Neurol ISSN: 0364-5134 Impact factor: 10.422