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A dark side of subcortical diffusion-weighted lesions? Characteristics, cause, and outcome in large subcortical infarction: the Bergen Norwegian stroke cooperation study

Authors :
Nicola Logallo
Halvor Naess
Halvor Øygarden
Lars Thomassen
Gunnar Moen
Christopher Elnan Kvistad
Ulrike Waje-Andreassen
Source :
Stroke. 45(9)
Publication Year :
2014

Abstract

Background and Purpose— Diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI) is highly accurate in identifying and locating ischemic stroke injury. Few studies using DWI have investigated large subcortical infarctions (LSIs). We aimed to study clinical characteristics, cause, and outcome in patients with ischemic stroke with LSI diagnosed on DWI and compare these with those who had lacunar DWI lesions or DWI lesions located elsewhere. Methods— Patients with stroke admitted between February 2006 and July 2013 were prospectively registered in a stroke database and examined with DWI. Patients with DWI lesions classified as LSI (subcortical, ≥15 mm) were compared with those with lacunar lesions (subcortical, Results— A total of 1886 patients with ischemic stroke were included, of which 128 patients (6.8%) had LSI, 317 (16.8%) LI, and 544 (28.8%) CI. The no LSI group included 1758 patients. Occlusive pathology in the proximal middle cerebral artery was more frequent in patients with acute stroke with LSI. Lacunar syndrome was associated with LSI when compared with CI and no LSI. Unknown cause was frequent in the LSI group (60.4%) and independently associated with LSI in the LSI versus LI ( P P =0.002), and LSI versus no LSI population ( P P =0.002), CI ( P P =0.002). Conclusions— LSI is associated with distinct clinical characteristics, unknown cause, and unfavorable outcome, which separates this stroke entity from patients with lacunar subcortical DWI lesions or DWI lesions located elsewhere.

Details

ISSN :
15244628
Volume :
45
Issue :
9
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Stroke
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....6ad5019c8c829560ae4d493b533e12e1