| Literature DB >> 27047443 |
Amre Nouh1, Mohammed Hussain1, Tapan Mehta1, Shadi Yaghi2.
Abstract
Up to a third of strokes are rendered cryptogenic or of undetermined etiology. This number is specifically higher in younger patients. At times, inadequate diagnostic workups, multiple causes, or an under-recognized etiology contributes to this statistic. Embolic stroke of undetermined source, a new clinical entity particularly refers to patients with embolic stroke for whom the etiology of embolism remains unidentified despite through investigations ruling out established cardiac and vascular sources. In this article, we review current classification and discuss important clinical considerations in these patients; highlighting cardiac arrhythmias and structural abnormalities, patent foramen ovale, paradoxical sources, and potentially under-recognized, vascular, inflammatory, autoimmune, and hematologic sources in relation to clinical practice.Entities:
Keywords: aortic arch atherosclerosis; cardiac monitoring; cryptogenic stroke; embolic stroke of undetermined source; hypercoagulable state; paroxysmal atrial fibrillation; patent foramen ovale
Year: 2016 PMID: 27047443 PMCID: PMC4800279 DOI: 10.3389/fneur.2016.00037
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neurol ISSN: 1664-2295 Impact factor: 4.003
Cardiac monitoring for detection of atrial fibrillation in ESUS and CS.
| Type of monitoring | Setting | Invasive vs. non-invasive | Duration | Rate of detection of atrial fibrillation (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Admission ECG | Inpatient | Non-invasive | N/A | 2.7 |
| Inpatient continuous telemetry | Inpatient | Non-invasive | 3–5 days | 5.5–7.6 |
| Holter monitor | Outpatient | Non-invasive | 24–48 h | 3.2–6.4 |
| Mobile continuous outpatient telemetry | Outpatient | Non-invasive | 21–30 days | 16–25 |
| Implantable loop recorders | Outpatient | Invasive | 6–18 months | 20–30 |
| Mobile continuous outpatient telemetry | Outpatient | Non-invasive | 28 days | 16.2 |
| Implantable cardiac monitor | Outpatient | Invasive | 6–36 months | 9–30 |
Risk of paradoxical embolism score calculator (.
| Characteristic | Points |
|---|---|
| No history of hypertension | 1 |
| No history of diabetes | 1 |
| No history of stroke or TIA | 1 |
| Non-smoker | 1 |
| Cortical infarct on imaging | 1 |
| Age (years) | |
| 18–29 | 5 |
| 30–39 | 4 |
| 40–49 | 3 |
| 50–59 | 2 |
| 60–69 | 1 |
| ≥70 | 0 |
| Total score (sum of individual points) | |
| Maximum score (a patient <30 years with no hypertension, no diabetes, no history of stroke or TIA, non-smoker, and cortical infarct) | 10 |
| Minimum score (a patient ≥70 years with hypertension, diabetes prior stroke, current smoker, and no cortical infarct) | 0 |
PFO prevalence, attributable fraction and estimated 2-year risk of stroke or TIA by points strata (using a control rate of 25%) (.
| CS ( | CS with PFO ( | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| RoPE score | No. of patients | Prevelence of patients with a PF (95% CI) | PFO-attributable fraction,% (95% CI) | Estimated 2-year stroke/TIA recurrence rate, % (95% CI) |
| 0–3 | 613 | 23 (19–26) | 0 (0–4) | 20 (12–28) |
| 4 | 511 | 35 (31–39) | 38 (25–48) | 12 (6–18) |
| 5 | 516 | 34 (30–38) | 34 (21–45) | 7 (3–11) |
| 6 | 482 | 47 (42–51) | 62 (21–45) | 8 (4–12) |
| 7 | 434 | 54 (49–59) | 72 (66–76) | 6 (2–10) |
| 8 | 287 | 67 (62–73) | 84 (79–87) | 6 (2–10) |
| 9 | 180 | 73 (66–79) | 88 (83–91) | 2 (0–4) |
Implicated hypercoagulable states in stroke (.
| Prevalence | Probable | Possible | Equivocal | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Coagulation proteins defects | 0–21% | Fibrinogen level, prothrombin G20210A variant factor V Leiden, protein C, protein S, Antithrombin III | Factor VIII level | Factor XII, Factor XIII, vWF Smal polymorphism in intron 2 | |
| Fibrinolytic system defects | 0–2.7% | Plasminogen activator inhibitor type 1 | Tissue plasminogen activator | ||
| Platelets hyper-reactivity | No evidence | – | – | – | |
| Biochemical | Difficult to identify direct contribution due to multifactorial process | Hyperhomocysteinemia, MTHFR c677t | C-reactive protein, lipoprotein a, paraoxonase 1, endothelial nitric oxide synthase, apo-lipoprotein, transforming growth factor B1, P-selectin angiotensin converting enzyme, P-selectin | ||
| Not enough data based on studies | Oral contraceptive pills, hormone replacement therapy, history of idiopathic venous thrombosis, malignancy | Thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura, heparin-induced thrombocytopenia | |||
| 5–20% | Antiphospholipid syndrome | ||||
| 5–10% | Myeloproliferative disorders | ||||
| Sickle cell anemia (15%), Sickle-C disease (2–5%), Sickle cell trait (1.5–2%) | Sickle cell disease | ||||
Figure 1Suggested investigative approach for patients with ESUS.