| Literature DB >> 34708410 |
Nadine Vonderlin1,2,3, Karsten Kortuem4, Johannes Siebermair1,2,3, Martin Köhrmann5, Tienush Rassaf1, Steffen Massberg2,3, Siegfried Priglinger4, Stefan Kääb2,3, Reza Wakili1,2,3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Central retinal artery occlusion ((C)RAO) is known to be associated with stroke and/or atrial fibrillation (AF). Nevertheless, patients often present at the ophthalmologist initially and it is unknown how many of these receive an adequate cardiological/neurological work-up (CWU/NWU), including a 24 h-Holter-ECG. HYPOTHESIS: Hypothesis of this study was that patients with (C)RAO do not undergo CWU on regular basis and that new-onset AF is more often detected in patients with CWU. METHODS ANDEntities:
Keywords: (C)RAO; AF; anticoagulation; stroke
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34708410 PMCID: PMC8715400 DOI: 10.1002/clc.23673
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Cardiol ISSN: 0160-9289 Impact factor: 2.882
FIGURE 1In 3 years (01/2014–11/2016), 292 patients presented at our department of ophthalmology; 24 patients met exclusion criteria. Of the 268 patients meeting inclusion criteria, 94 patients were excluded (82 patients were unable to comply study protocol or missed land phone line; 12 patients died in follow‐up of 20 ± 12 months). Overall, 174 patients could be included. AF, atrial fibrillation
Patients characteristics and comorbidity
| Patient characteristics/comorbidity (=number of patients) | Patients included in study |
|---|---|
|
| |
| Male, | 107 (61.5%) |
| Age, years (mean ± SD) | 74.2 ± 13.0 |
| CRAO, | 86 (49.4%) |
| CHA2DS2VASc‐Score equivalent, excl. (C)RAO (mean ± SD) | 3.7 ± 1.7 |
| Low risk (score 0) | 5 (2.9%) |
| Intermediate risk (score 1–2) | 37 (21.3%) |
| High risk | 132 (75.9%) |
| CHA2DS2VASc‐Score equivalent, incl. (C)RAO (mean ± SD) | 5.3 ± 1.4 |
| low risk (score 0) | 0 (0%) |
| intermediate risk (score 1–2) | 6 (3.4%) |
| high risk | 168 (96.6%) |
| Heart failure, | 27 (15.5%) |
| Arterial hypertension, | 145 (83.3%) |
| Age 65–74 | 32 (18.4%) |
| Age ≥ 75, | 103 (59.2%) |
| Diabetes mellitus, | 34 (19.5%) |
| Stroke, | 27 (15.5%) |
| Vascular disease, | 69 (39.7%) |
| Coronary artery disease, | 39 (22.4%) |
| Periphery artery disease, | 20 (11.5%) |
| Carotid/vertebral stenosis, | 42 (24.1%) |
Note: Table 1: In the table the patient characteristics as well as cardiovascular risk factors is depicted. To evaluate the potential risk for stroke, for each patient a CHA2DS2‐VASc‐Score equivalent was calculated as if atrial fibrillation would be present. We want to distinguish the high mean CHA2DS2‐VASc‐Score when counting (C)RAO as an stroke equivalent. (C)RAO: (central) retinal artery occlusion.
FIGURE 2(A) Rate of CWU in the CRAD cohort. Only 50.6% of the studied cohort received a CWU by further ECG. (B) Regarding all included patients (n = 174), only 50.6% received a screening for AF with a single 24‐Holter ECG which was realized in 4/5 cases in an ambulatory setting. The number of 1st diagnosis of AF was counted 20% (14/70) in ambulatory setting whereas in clinical setting the number was lower with 11.1% (2/18). So overall we obtained over 18% of new‐onset AF by one single 24‐Holter ECG. At least in 7% AF was documented for the first time in patients who did not receive a specific AF screening. In summary, in 12.6% new‐onset AF could be counted in a FU of 20 months ±12 months. AF, atrial fibrillation
FIGURE 3Etiology of (C)RAO: Patients with AF documented for the 1st time had a prevalence of 10.3%. Severe stenosis of carotid arteries (NASCET criteria; ≥70%) were known in 21.8%. In 2.3% patients named both diseases so a definitive attribution is not possible. In most cases – over 65% – no etiology could be identified. (C)RAO: (central) retinal artery occlusion; AF: atrial fibrillation
FIGURE 4In figure (A), the analysis of blood‐thinning therapies is represented: In most cases (about 70%) APT was taken only. OAC were only named in 8.0% and 3.4% had ASS as well as OAC, remaining 18.4% taking none. Figure (B) shows that patients with 1st diagnosis of AF (n = 22) did not take a OAC in more than 36%. Thus only 2/3 of patients with AF had a secondary prophylaxis against stroke. AF, atrial fibrillation; APT, anti‐platelet therapy; (C)RAO, (central) retinal artery occlusion; OAC, oral anticoagulation