Transesophageal echocardiography in patients less than 60 years of age without obvious cardiac source of embolism.

Transesophageal echocardiography in patients less than 60 years of age without obvious cardiac source of embolism. Neurol Res. 1995 Oct;17(5):368-372 Authors: Nighoghossian N, Perinetti M, Barthelet M, Adeleine P, Trouillas P Abstract Minor potential cardioembolic sources of stroke such as atrial septal aneurysms (ASA) or patent foramen ovale (PFO) are important risk factors for cryptogenic stroke. We aim to determine the prevalence of these abnormalities through an exhaustive etiological workup including transesophageal echocardiography and cervical arteries assessment in stroke patients younger than 60 years of age who had no evidence of a significant source of embolism. We classified 118 stroke patients into four groups according to transesophageal echocardiography (TEE) and cervical arteries assessment findings. Group A, consisted of 30 (25.4%) patients who had an arteriopathy likely related to stroke without any cardiac abnormality; Group B, 49 (41%) patients who had only a potential cardiac source; Group C, 9 (7.6%) patients who had an obvious arterial source of stroke and incidental cardiac abnormalities, and Group D, 30 (25.4%) patients who had neither cardiac nor arterial source. Data were analysed with X2 test for the comparison of risk factors between groups. Variance analysis was used to compare age between groups. Significance was assessed as p <0.05. ASA represented 56.8% of the cardiac abnormalities and was diagnose...
Source: Neurological Research - Category: Neurology Tags: Neurol Res Source Type: research