Back to Search Start Over

Stiffness parameter β of cardioembolism measured by carotid ultrasound was lower than other stroke subtypes

Authors :
Yasuyuki Iguchi
Keiko Bono
Mikihiro Yamazaki
Renpei Sengoku
Hidetaka Mitsumura
Tsutomu Kamiyama
Masahiko Suzuki
Hiroshi Furuhata
Kenichi Sakuta
Yu Kono
Source :
Journal of stroke and cerebrovascular diseases : the official journal of National Stroke Association. 23(6)
Publication Year :
2013

Abstract

Background We estimated the stiffness parameter β (β value), which is useful in the assessment of premature atherosclerosis, among patients with different subtypes of cerebral infarction (CI; eg, small-vessel occlusion, large-artery atherosclerosis, cardioembolism, and other determined and undetermined etiologies) to determine the clinical utility of the β value in classification of stroke patients into CI subtypes. Methods Carotid ultrasonography (ALOKA ProSound SSD-alpha10) was performed in 31 CI patients and 38 control subjects, and the β value of the bilateral common carotid artery at 2.0 cm proximal to the bifurcation was measured using the echo-tracking method. The relationship between β value and age was examined, and the β value was compared among the different CI subtypes. Results Positive β value correlated with age in control subjects ( R = .69, P R = −.01, P = .996). There was no significant difference in the β value when comparing control patients and patients with cardioembolic stroke ( P = .106), but the β value were lower in patients with cardioembolic stroke than in patients with noncardioembolic stroke (eg, small-vessel occlusion, large-artery atherosclerosis, and others, P = .009). Conclusions The β value was lower in patients with cardioembolic stroke than in patients with noncardioembolic stroke. The β value may be useful for estimating the risk of different stroke subtypes.

Details

ISSN :
15328511
Volume :
23
Issue :
6
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of stroke and cerebrovascular diseases : the official journal of National Stroke Association
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....9a92423f74741260e6c9a5cd1e2ac7c9