| Literature DB >> 21804774 |
Abstract
This article provides the reader with an overview and up-date of clinical features, specific cardiac disorders and prognosis of cardioembolic stroke. Cardioembolic stroke accounts for 14-30% of ischemic strokes and, in general, is a severe condition; patients with cardioembolic infarction are prone to early and long-term stroke recurrence, although recurrences may be preventable by appropriate treatment during the acute phase and strict control at follow-up. Certain clinical features are suggestive of cardioembolic infarction, including sudden onset to maximal deficit, decreased level of consciousness at onset, Wernicke's aphasia or global aphasia without hemiparesis, a Valsalva manoeuvre at the time of stroke onset, and co-occurrence of cerebral and systemic emboli. Lacunar clinical presentations, a lacunar infarct and especially multiple lacunar infarcts, make cardioembolic origin unlikely. The more common high risk cardioembolic conditions are atrial fibrillation, recent myocardial infarction, mechanical prosthetic valve, dilated myocardiopathy, and mitral rheumatic stenosis. Transthoracic and transesophageal echocardiogram can disclose structural heart diseases. Paroxysmal atrial dysrhyhtmia can be detected by Holter monitoring. In-hospital mortality in cardioembolic stroke (27.3%, in our series) is the highest as compared with other subtypes of cerebral infarction. In our experience, in-hospital mortality in patients with early embolic recurrence (within the first 7 days) was 77%. Patients with alcohol abuse, hypertension, valvular heart disease, nausea and vomiting, and previous cerebral infarction are at increased risk of early recurrent systemic embolization. Secondary prevention with anticoagulants should be started immediately if possible in patients at high risk for recurrent cardioembolic stroke in which contraindications, such as falls, poor compliance, uncontrolled epilepsy or gastrointestinal bleeding are absent.Entities:
Keywords: Cardioembolic stroke; atrial fibrillation; cardiac source of emboli; outcome.; recurrent embolization
Year: 2010 PMID: 21804774 PMCID: PMC2994107 DOI: 10.2174/157340310791658730
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Curr Cardiol Rev ISSN: 1573-403X
Distribution of Cerebral Infarctions According to Age in the Sagrat Cor Hospital of Barcelona Stroke Registry
| Subtype of Cerebral Infarction (n = 1840) | Years of Age | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| < 65 (n= 314) | 65–74 (n=501) | 75–84 (n=722) | ≥ 85 (n=303) | |
| Cardioembolic | 46 (14.6) | 100 (20) | 213 (29.5) | 109 (36) |
| Atherothrombotic | 66 (21.0) | 159 (31.7) | 233 (32.3) | 95 (31.4) |
| Lacunar | 93 (29.6) | 159 (31.7) | 173 (24) | 59 (19.5) |
| Unknown cause | 61 (19.4) | 69 (13.8) | 81 (11.2) | 37 (12.2) |
| Unusual cause | 48 (15.3) | 14 (2.8) | 22 (3.0) | 3 (1) |
Percentages in parenthesis.
Cardiac Disorders and Pathophysiological Mechanisms Presumptively Associated with Cardioembolic Stroke in 402 Patients. Distribution by Cardiac Source Risk Groups. Sagrat Cor Hospital of Barcelona Stroke Registry
| Cardiac Source of Embolism | Total Patients | |
|---|---|---|
| Arrhythmia without structural heart disease | 89 (22.1%) | |
| Atrial fibrillation | 88 | |
| Atrial flutter | 1 | |
| Isolated structural heart disease | 81 (20.1%) | |
| Ischaemic heart disease | 35 | |
| Acute myocardial infarction | 3 (thrombus 2) | |
| Left ventricular aneurysm | 7 (thrombus 3) | |
| Left ventricular ejection fraction < 40% | 12 | |
| Akinesia/dyskinesia ≥ two segments | 13 (thrombus 3) | |
| Dilated cardiomyopathy | 24 (thrombus 5) | |
| Mitral annular calcification | 14[ | |
| Cardiac tumour | 4 | |
| Aortic prosthetic valve | 4 | |
| Endocarditis | 2 | |
| Atrial septal aneurysm with patent foramen ovale | 2 | |
| Rheumatic mitral valve disease | 1 | |
| Mitral valve prolapse | 1 | |
| Calcified aortic stenosis | 1 | |
| Moderate mitral valve regurgitation | 1 | |
| Structural heart disease and atrial arrhythmia | 232 (57.7%) | |
| Atrial fibrillation | 230 | |
| Atrial flutter | 2 | |
| Hypertrophic hypertensive cardiac disease | 120 | |
| Rheumatic mitral valve disease | 49 (thrombus 7) | |
| Ischaemic heart disease | 19 | |
| Left ventricular aneurysm | 3 (thrombus 1) | |
| Left ventricular ejection fraction < 40% | 9 | |
| Akinesia/dyskinesia ≥ two segments | 7 (thrombus 1) | |
| Mitral annular calcification | 26[ | |
| Dilated cardiomyopathy | 13 (thrombus 2) | |
| Mitral valve prolapse | 4 | |
| Mitral prosthetic valve | 3 (thrombus 2) | |
| Lipomatous hypertrophy of the atrial septum | 2 | |
| Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy | 2 | |
| Atrial septal aneurysm and patent foramen ovale | 2 | |
| Severe mitral regurgitation | 2 | |
In 8 patients in association with a structural cardiac source of embolism (dilated cardiomyopathy, n=2; ischaemic heart disease with ventricular ejection fraction < 40%, n=2; acute myocardial infarction, n=1; left ventricular aneurysm, n =1; aortic prosthetic valve, n=1; mitral leaflet calcification with moderate regurgitation, n=1).
In 10 patients in association with a structural cardiac source of embolism (hypertensive left ventricular hypertrophy, n=8; mitral leaflet calcification with severe degenerative type regurgitation, n=2).
Frequency of the Different Cardiological Substrate in 402 Patients with Cardioembolic Stroke in the Sagrat Cor Hospital of Barcelona Stroke Registry
| Cardiac Source of Embolism | Total Patients | |
|---|---|---|
| Atrial fibrillation | 318 (79.1%) | |
| Lone atrial fibrillation | 88 | |
| Associated with structural cardiac disease | 230 | |
| Hypertensive left ventricular hypertrophy | 120 (29.8%) | |
| Associated with atrial fibrillation | 118 | |
| Associated with atrial flutter | 2 | |
| Left ventricular systolic dysfunction | 91 (22.6%) | |
| Sinus rhythm | 59 | |
| Atrial fibrillation | 32 | |
| Rheumatic mitral valve disease | 50 (12.4%) | |
| Mitral annular calcification | 40 (9.9%) | |
| Mitral valve prolapse | 5 (1.2%) | |
| Atrial septal aneurysm with patent foramen ovale | 4 (1%) | |
| Degenerative heart valve disease | 4 (1%) | |