BACKGROUND: Congestive heart failure in sinus rhythm ranks second after atrial fibrillation (AF) among cardiogenic risk-factors for stroke. Clinical and echocardiographic predictors of stroke in this high-risk population remain poorly defined. METHODS: Retrospective screening of 1886 consecutive patients with severe systolic dysfunction (LVEF ≤35%) at a tertiary medical center echocardiography database (Nov 2005-Sep 2008) identified 83 patients in sinus rhythm with cardioembolic stroke. Patients with AF on follow-up, prosthetic valve, ventricular arrhythmia and lack of consensus between reviewing neurologists were excluded (n=10). Consecutive age and gender-matched controls in sinus rhythm formed GpII (n=73). RESULTS: The incidence of stroke was 3.9% (73/1886) over 35 months in this study. There were no significant differences in prevalence of established clinical risk-factors for stroke. There was a significantly higher prevalence of LV non-compaction (p=0.02), aneurysm (p<0.01), spontaneous echo-contrast (p<0.01) and pulmonary hypertension (p<0.001) in GpI. CONCLUSIONS: LV non-compaction, aneurysm, spontaneous echo-contrast and pulmonary hypertension are associated with an increased risk of stroke. While anticoagulation of these high-risk subgroups appears reasonable, further study in a prospective randomized clinical trial merits consideration.
BACKGROUND:Congestive heart failure in sinus rhythm ranks second after atrial fibrillation (AF) among cardiogenic risk-factors for stroke. Clinical and echocardiographic predictors of stroke in this high-risk population remain poorly defined. METHODS: Retrospective screening of 1886 consecutive patients with severe systolic dysfunction (LVEF ≤35%) at a tertiary medical center echocardiography database (Nov 2005-Sep 2008) identified 83 patients in sinus rhythm with cardioembolic stroke. Patients with AF on follow-up, prosthetic valve, ventricular arrhythmia and lack of consensus between reviewing neurologists were excluded (n=10). Consecutive age and gender-matched controls in sinus rhythm formed GpII (n=73). RESULTS: The incidence of stroke was 3.9% (73/1886) over 35 months in this study. There were no significant differences in prevalence of established clinical risk-factors for stroke. There was a significantly higher prevalence of LV non-compaction (p=0.02), aneurysm (p<0.01), spontaneous echo-contrast (p<0.01) and pulmonary hypertension (p<0.001) in GpI. CONCLUSIONS: LV non-compaction, aneurysm, spontaneous echo-contrast and pulmonary hypertension are associated with an increased risk of stroke. While anticoagulation of these high-risk subgroups appears reasonable, further study in a prospective randomized clinical trial merits consideration.
Authors: Cristina Chimenti; Carlo Lavalle; Michele Magnocavallo; Maria Alfarano; Marco Valerio Mariani; Federico Bernardini; Domenico Giovanni Della Rocca; Gioacchino Galardo; Paolo Severino; Luca Di Lullo; Fabio Miraldi; Francesco Fedele; Andrea Frustaci Journal: ESC Heart Fail Date: 2021-12-16