Literature DB >> 17095739

Hypertensive intracerebral hemorrhage in young people: previously unnoticed age-related clinical differences.

José L Ruiz-Sandoval1, Samuel Romero-Vargas, Erwin Chiquete, Juan J Padilla-Martínez, Jorge Villarreal-Careaga, Carlos Cantú, Antonio Arauz, Fernando Barinagarrementería.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND AND
PURPOSE: Hypertensive intracerebral hemorrhage (ICH) in young people has been the object of only succinct analyses. Therefore, it is unclear whether extrapolation of the information obtained from older patients is also valid for the young. Here we describe young persons with hypertensive ICH and compare them with their older counterparts to determine whether age-related clinical differences exist.
METHODS: From 1988 to 2004, we studied 35 consecutive young patients with ICH (60% men; mean age, 33 years; range, 15 to 40 years) for whom the etiology of the brain hemorrhage was hypertension. For clinical comparisons, sex-matched persons with hypertensive ICH, aged >40 years, were randomly selected by a factor of 3:1 (n=105).
RESULTS: Essential hypertension was present in 26 (74%) young patients and secondary hypertension in 9 (26%), with renovascular hypertension being the most common cause (n=5, 55%). Compared with older patients, the young had higher blood pressures, smaller hemorrhage volumes, lower rates of ventricular extensions (for all, P<0.05), and different distribution pattern of ICHs (P=0.05), without cerebellar and lobar locations. Thirty-day mortality was markedly lower in the young than in older persons (P=0.001), nevertheless at the expense of more incapacitating disabilities.
CONCLUSIONS: Young people presenting with hypertensive ICH differ in clinical characteristics and have a different prognosis when compared with their older counterparts. These findings suggest underlying age-related differences in disease pathogenesis.

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Year:  2006        PMID: 17095739     DOI: 10.1161/01.STR.0000248766.22741.4b

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Stroke        ISSN: 0039-2499            Impact factor:   7.914


  10 in total

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Authors:  Erwin Chiquete; Ana Ochoa-Guzmán; Angel Vargas-Sánchez; Jorge Navarro-Bonnet; Miquel A Andrade-Ramos; Patricia Gutiérrez-Plascencia; José L Ruiz-Sandoval
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10.  The outcomes of spontaneous intracerebral hemorrhage in young adults - a clinical study.

Authors:  Gyeong O Go; Hyun Park; Chul Hee Lee; Soo Hyun Hwang; Jong Woo Han; In Sung Park
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  10 in total

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