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Imaging features and ultraearly hematoma growth in intracerebral hemorrhage associated with COVID-19

Authors :
Andrea Morotti
Andrea Pilotto
Valentina Mazzoleni
Enrico Fainardi
Ilaria Casetta
Anna Cavallini
Giulia Del Moro
Elisa Candeloro
Francesco Janes
Paolo Costa
Andrea Zini
Eleonora Leuci
Federico Mazzacane
Serena Magno
Oriela Rustemi
Fabio Raneri
Giuseppe Canova
Mariarosaria Valente
Andrea Giorgianni
Francesca Solazzo
Maurizio Versino
Marco Mauri
Mauro Gentile
Ludovica Migliaccio
Stefano Forlivesi
Eugenio Magni
Elisabetta Del Zotto
Alberto Benussi
Enrico Premi
Massimo Gamba
Loris Poli
Alessandro Pezzini
Roberto Gasparotti
Mauro Magoni
Stefano Gipponi
Alessandro Padovani
Source :
Neuroradiology
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Purpose Intracerebral hemorrhage (ICH) is an uncommon but deadly event in patients with COVID-19 and its imaging features remain poorly characterized. We aimed to describe the clinical and imaging features of COVID-19-associated ICH. Methods Multicenter, retrospective, case–control analysis comparing ICH in COVID-19 patients (COV19 +) versus controls without COVID-19 (COV19 −). Clinical presentation, laboratory markers, and severity of COVID-19 disease were recorded. Non-contrast computed tomography (NCCT) markers (intrahematoma hypodensity, heterogeneous density, blend sign, irregular shape fluid level), ICH location, and hematoma volume (ABC/2 method) were analyzed. The outcome of interest was ultraearly hematoma growth (uHG) (defined as NCCT baseline ICH volume/onset-to-imaging time), whose predictors were explored with multivariable linear regression. Results A total of 33 COV19 + patients and 321 COV19 − controls with ICH were included. Demographic characteristics and vascular risk factors were similar in the two groups. Multifocal ICH and NCCT markers were significantly more common in the COV19 + population. uHG was significantly higher among COV19 + patients (median 6.2 mL/h vs 3.1 mL/h, p = 0.027), and this finding remained significant after adjustment for confounding factors (systolic blood pressure, antiplatelet and anticoagulant therapy), in linear regression (B(SE) = 0.31 (0.11), p = 0.005). This association remained consistent also after the exclusion of patients under anticoagulant treatment (B(SE) = 0.29 (0.13), p = 0.026). Conclusions ICH in COV19 + patients has distinct NCCT imaging features and a higher speed of bleeding. This association is not mediated by antithrombotic therapy and deserves further research to characterize the underlying biological mechanisms.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Neuroradiology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....7a048a0669f2ff120447259eb8680e63