Literature DB >> 30673852

Evolution of acute lacunar lesions in terms of size and shape: a PICASSO sub-study.

Hyuk Sung Kwon1, A-Hyun Cho2, Min Hwan Lee3, Dongwhane Lee4, Da-Eun Jeong5, Changwoon Choi6, Ji-Wan Jang7, Sungwook Yu8, Jong-Ho Park9, Sung Hyuk Heo10, Ji-Sung Lee11, Sun U Kwon12.   

Abstract

The imaging definition of lacunar infarcts is variable, particularly regarding their size and the presence of cavitation. We investigated the changes of diameter and evolution pattern of acute lacunar infarcts, and the factors associated with the evolution pattern. Patients with acute single subcortical hemispheric or brainstem ischemic lesions of penetrating arterial territories were included. Maximal diameters on initial diffusion-weighted image (DWI) and follow-up fluid-attenuated inversion recovery image (FLAIR), which performed > 12 months after initial DWI, were semi-automatically measured. Clinical characteristics were compared according to evolution patterns on follow-up FLAIR, classified as cavitated, focal lesion without cavitation, and disappeared. Five hundred nine patients were included. Mean time to follow-up was 31.3 ± 13.7 months. Mean diameter of acute lacunar lesions decreased from 12.9 ± 4.4 to 8.5 ± 4.8 mm during follow-up. Lesions of 58.2% patients remained as cavitated, 18.3% as focal lesion without cavitation, and 23.6% disappeared. Initial NIHSS score (p = 0.005), diameter of initial lesion (p < 0.001), number of slices showing acute lesion on DWI (p < 0.001), progression of white matter lesion (p < 0.001), number of acute lesions involving gray matter (p = 0.008) and lesion location (p < 0.001) were different among three groups. After adjustment for covariates, diameter of the acute lesion, initial number of old lacunes, and anterior lesion location were associated with the appearance of cavitation. Initial lesion diameter and posterior lesion location were associated with the disappearance. We observed reduction of the acute lacunar lesion diameter in 86%. There were predictive factors of disappearance and cavitation of acute lacunar infarction.

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Keywords:  Cavitation; Lacunar infarction; Size criteria

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Year:  2019        PMID: 30673852     DOI: 10.1007/s00415-019-09201-7

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Neurol        ISSN: 0340-5354            Impact factor:   4.849


  1 in total

1.  Post-stroke cognitive impairment as an independent predictor of ischemic stroke recurrence: PICASSO sub-study.

Authors:  Hyuk Sung Kwon; Dongwhane Lee; Min Hwan Lee; Sungwook Yu; Jae-Sung Lim; Kyung-Ho Yu; Mi Sun Oh; Ji-Sung Lee; Keun-Sik Hong; Eun-Jae Lee; Dong-Wha Kang; Sun U Kwon
Journal:  J Neurol       Date:  2019-11-12       Impact factor: 4.849

  1 in total

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