| Literature DB >> 21776365 |
Sara Ciccone1, Michela Cappella, Caterina Borgna-Pignatti.
Abstract
Stroke is a rare disease in children, with an estimated incidence 13/100000 and a significant impact on morbidity and mortality. Clinical presentation and risk factors, present in almost half of pediatric patients, are not the same as in adults. The diagnosis of stroke in children is often delayed because signs and symptoms can be subtle and nonspecific. History and clinical examination should exclude underlying diseases or predisposing factors. Neuroimaging is crucial in defining diagnosis. Other tests might be necessary, according to the clinical picture. We present here the most recent practical directions on how to diagnose and manage arterial stroke in children, according to different international guidelines on the subject.Entities:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21776365 PMCID: PMC3138064 DOI: 10.4061/2011/736965
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Stroke Res Treat
Risk factors for pediatric stroke.
| Ventricular/atrial septal defect |
| Patent ductus arteriosus |
| Aortic/mitral stenosis |
| Coarctation |
| Cardiac rhabdomyoma |
| Complex congenital heart defects |
| Rheumatic heart disease |
| Prosthetic heart valve |
| Endocarditis |
| Cardiomyopathy |
| Myocarditis |
| Atrial myxoma |
| Arrhythmia |
| Systemic hypertension |
| Volume depletion or systemic hypotension |
| Hypernatremia |
| Superior vena cava syndrome |
| Diabetes |
| Meningitis |
| Systemic infection |
| Systemic lupus erythematosus |
| Polyarteritis nodosa |
| Granulomatous angiitis |
| Takayasu's arteritis |
| Rheumatoid arthritis |
| Dermatomyositis |
| Inflammatory bowel disease |
| Drug abuse (cocaine, amphetamines) |
| Hemolytic-uremic syndrome |
| Ehlers-Danlos syndrome |
| Homocystinuria |
| Moyamoya syndrome |
| Fabry's disease |
| Malignant atrophic papulosis |
| Pseudoxanthoma elasticurn |
| NADH-CoQ reductase deficiency |
| Migraine |
| Ergot poisoning |
| Vasospasm with subarachnoid hemorrhage |
| Hemoglobinopathies (sickle cell anemia, sickle |
| cell-hemoglobin C, sickle-thalassemia) |
| Immune thrombocytopenic purpura |
| Thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura |
| Thrombocytosis |
| Polycythemia |
| Disseminated intravascular coagulation |
| Leukemia or other neoplasms |
| Congenital coagulation defects |
| Oral contraceptive use |
| Antithrombin III deficiency |
| Protein S deficiency |
| Protein C deficiency |
| Congenital serum C2 deficiency |
| Liver dysfunction with coagulation defect |
| Vitamin K deficiency |
| Lupus anticoagulant |
| Anticardiolipin antibodies |
| Arterial fibromuscular dysplasia |
| Agenesis or hypoplasia of the internal carotid or |
| vertebral arteries |
| Arteriovenous malformation |
| Hereditary hemorrhagic telangiectasia |
| Sturge-Weber syndrome |
| Intracranial aneurysm |
| Child abuse |
| Fat or air embolism |
| Foreign body embolism |
| Carotid ligation |
| Vertebral occlusion following abrupt cervical rotation |
| Posttraumatic arterial dissection |
| Blunt cervical arterial trauma |
| Arteriography |
| Posttraumatic carotid cavernous fistula |
| Coagulation defect with minor trauma |
| Penetrating intracranial trauma |
Clinical presentation of stroke depending on the involved artery.
| Vascular territory | Symptoms |
|---|---|
| Internal carotid artery | Hemiparesis, aphasia, and hemianopsia |
| Anterior cerebral artery | Hemiparesis, especially leg |
| Middle cerebral artery | Arm hemiparesis, hemianopsia, and aphasia |
| Posterior cerebral artery | Hemianopsia, ataxia, hemiparesis, and dizziness |
| Basilar artery | Breath, sensory or balance disturbances, ataxia, nystagmus, opisthotonus, tremor, and vomiting |
| Cerebellar artery | Sensory disturbances, headache, fever, vomit, and cerebellar signs |
Figure 1Flowchart: diagnosis of ischemic stroke in emergency.
Risk factors for stroke in sickle cell disease.
| (i) high blood flow velocity on transcranial Doppler |
| (ii) low hemoglobin value |
| (iii) high HbS level |
| (iv) high white cell and platelet counts |
| (v) hypertension |
| (vi) silent brain infarction |
| (vii) history of chest crisis, transient ischemic attacks, meningitis, seizures, surgery, priapism, acute anemia, and transfusion within 2 weeks before the stroke |