| Literature DB >> 28326034 |
Kang Yang1, Yulan Feng2, JinJin Mu1, Ningzhen Fu3, Shufen Chen1, Yi Fu1.
Abstract
Background and Purpose: Cerebral microbleeds are an intracerebral microangiopathy with bleeding tendency found in intracerebral hemorrhage patients. However, studies about cerebral microbleed effects on the prognosis of hypertensive intracerebral hemorrhage patients are rare. We performed a prospective study to discuss not only the risk factors of cerebral microbleed incidence in hypertensive intracerebral hemorrhage patients but also the relevance of cerebral microbleeds with silent brain infarction, hemorrhage and prognosis.Entities:
Keywords: cerebral microbleeds; hypertension; intracerebral hemorrhage; magnetic resonance imaging; silent brain infarction
Year: 2017 PMID: 28326034 PMCID: PMC5339337 DOI: 10.3389/fnagi.2017.00049
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Aging Neurosci ISSN: 1663-4365 Impact factor: 5.750
Univariate analysis of patients with or without CMBs.
| Age, mean ( | 58.0 ± 11.0 | 62.7 ± 13.5 | 0.062 |
| Sex, male (%) | 28 (62.2%) | 37 (67.3%) | 0.598 |
| Diabetes mellitus | 6 (13.3%) | 11 (20.0%) | 0.377 |
| Hyperlipidemia | 28 (62.2%) | 32 (58.2%) | 0.682 |
| Current smoking | 14 (31.1%) | 19 (34.5%) | 0.716 |
| Drinking | 8 (17.8%) | 10 (18.2%) | 0.958 |
| Atrial fibrillation | 1 (2.2%) | 3 (5.5%) | 0.758 |
| Prior ischaemic stroke | 3 (6.7%) | 6 (10.9%) | 0.699 |
| Antiplatelet use prior to ICH | 3 (6.7%) | 13 (23.6%) | 0.021 |
| Antidiabetics use prior to ICH | 4 (8.9%) | 7 (12.7%) | 0.773 |
| TG, mmol/L | 1.5 (1.2–2.2) | 1.5 (1.1–2.0) | 0.763 |
| Cholesterol, mmol/L | 4.8 (4.0–5.5) | 4.7 (4.1–5.4) | 0.876 |
| H-DLC, mmol/L | 1.1 (0.9–1.3) | 1.1 (0.9–1.4) | 0.975 |
| L-DLC, mmol/L | 3.1 (2.3–3.6) | 3.0 (2.5–3.6) | 0.771 |
| BUN, mmol/L | 4.3 (3.3–5.4) | 5.1 (4.1–6.0) | 0.038 |
| Cr, umol/L | 63.0 (47.5–70.5) | 65.0 (54.0–79.0) | 0.040 |
| Homocysteine, umol/L | 12.1 (9.5–15.8) | 16.3 (12.2–22.1) | 0.001 |
| Glucose, mmol/L | 5.1 (4.6–6.7) | 5.0 (4.4–6.6) | 0.540 |
| Initial SBP at ER | 150.07 ± 21.48 | 156.65 ± 28.38 | 0.202 |
| Initial DBP at ER | 88.73 ± 11.63 | 90.07 ± 15.49 | 0.639 |
| Mean arterial pressure at ER | 109.18 ± 14.09 | 112.27 ± 18.57 | 0.360 |
| Baseline | 4 (2–6.5) | 3 (2–5) | 0.057 |
| Discharge | 4 (2–5) | 3 (2–4) | 0.181 |
| Baseline-Discharge | 0 (0–2) | 1 (0–1) | 0.665 |
| GCS | 15 (14.5–15.0) | 15.0 (15.0–15.0) | 0.181 |
| Basal ganglia | 25 (55.56%) | 27 (49.09%) | |
| Thalamus | 7 (15.56%) | 15 (27.27%) | |
| Pons | 3 (6.67%) | 3 (5.45%) | |
| Cerebellum | 1 (2.22%) | 3 (5.45%) | |
| Lobar | 9 (20%) | 7 (12.73%) | |
| Leukoaraiosis | 16 (35.6%) | 34 (61.8%) | 0.009 |
| Silent brain infarction | 1 (2.2%) | 10 (18.2%) | 0.027 |
CMBs, cerebral microbleeds; IQR, interquartile range; TG, triglyceride; BUN, blood urea nitrogen; Cr, creatinine; DBP, diastolic blood pressure; SBP, systolic blood pressure; NIHSS, NIH Stroke Scale; GCS, Glasgow Coma Scale; ICH, intracerebral hemorrhage.
Figure 1Distribution of average haematoma volumes of HICH in deep brain (basal ganglia and thalamus), infratentorial part (brainstem and cerebellum) and lobes. Lobe hemorrhage patients with CMBs possessed more haematoma volumes than patients without CMBs; deep brain hemorrhage patients with CMBs, however, possessed less haematoma volumes than those without CMBs, and the haematoma volumes in infratentorial hemorrhage patients with CMBs were nearly equivalent to patients without CMBs. The data in the graph were expressed in the form of the average ± standard deviation (*P < 0.05).
Correlation analysis of CMBs number and 3-month functional recoveries of patients.
| No CMB | 1 (reference) | 1 (reference) | 1 (reference) | 1 (reference) | 1 (reference) | |
| 1 CMB | 2.67 | 0.23–30.80 | 0.432 | 10.34 | 0.62–172.14 | 0.103 |
| 2–4 CMBs | 0.56 | 0.06–5.65 | 0.619 | 0.65 | 0.04–12.04 | 0.775 |
| ≥5 CMBs | 11.28 | 2.72–46.76 | <0.001 | 27.09 | 3.75–195.60 | 0.001 |
Figure 2Ratio of clinical cerebrovascular events or vascular deaths 1 year after disease onsets in the two groups of patients (with/without CMBs) using Kaplan-Meier analysis. Log-rank examination showed the existence of significant differences between the curves of two groups (P = 0.021).
Figure 3Distribution of modified Ranking Scale (mRS) score in 1-year follow-ups in HICH patients with or without CMBs. At 1 year after the onset, the mRS scores of patients with CMBs shifted upwards.