Stroke; a journal of cerebral circulation
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Anecdotal reports suggest that a loss of distinction between gray (GM) and white matter (WM) as adjudged by CT scan predicts poor outcome in comatose patients after cardiac arrest. To address this, we quantitatively assessed GM and WM intensities at various brain levels in comatose patients after cardiac arrest. ⋯ The ratio in HUs of GM to WM provides a reproducible measure of the distinction between gray and white matter. A lower GM/WM ratio is observed in comatose patients immediately after cardiac arrest. The basal ganglia level seems to be the most sensitive location on CT for measuring this relationship. Although a GM/WM ratio <1.18 at this level predicted death in this retrospective study, the difference in this study is not robust enough to recommend that management decisions be dictated by CT results. The results, however, do warrant consideration of a prospective study to determine the reliability of CT scanning in predicting outcome for comatose patients after cardiac arrest.
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Multicenter Study Comparative Study
Epidemiology of aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage in Australia and New Zealand: incidence and case fatality from the Australasian Cooperative Research on Subarachnoid Hemorrhage Study (ACROSS).
More data on the epidemiology of subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH) are required to increase our understanding of etiology and prevention. This study sought to determine the incidence and case fatality of SAH from 4 prospective, population-based registers in Australia and New Zealand. ⋯ There is variation in the incidence of SAH in Australia and New Zealand, but the rates are consistently higher for females. A monotonic increase in incidence with age suggests that exposures with cumulative effects and long induction times may be less relevant in the etiology of SAH.
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Comparative Study
Sex differences and similarities in the management and outcome of stroke patients.
Previous studies have documented sex differences in the management and outcome of patients with cardiovascular disease. However, little data exist on whether similar sex differences exist in stroke patients. We conducted a study to determine whether sex differences exist in patients with acute stroke admitted to Ontario hospitals. ⋯ Elderly men are more likely than elderly women to receive aspirin and ticlopidine and equally like to receive warfarin after a stroke. Despite these differences, elderly women have a better 1-year survival after a stroke.
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The purpose of the present study was to assess whether the direction of flow via the circle of Willis and the ophthalmic artery (OphA) changed over time in patients with a symptomatic occlusion of the internal carotid artery (ICA) who did not experience recurrent cerebral ischemic symptoms. ⋯ The absence of recurrent cerebral ischemic symptoms in patients with a symptomatic ICA occlusion is not associated with an improvement in collateral flow via the circle of Willis or the OphA during 1.5-year follow-up.
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Comparative Study
Silent cerebral ischemia detected by diffusion-weighted MRI after carotid endarterectomy.
Small emboli arising from a friable plaque during carotid endarterectomy (CEA) constitute an important risk of perioperative ischemic complications. To evaluate the incidence and significance of silent cerebral ischemic lesions of embolic origin after CEA, we prospectively examined a series of surgical patients with high-grade carotid stenosis by using diffusion-weighted MRI (DWI). We also tried to correlate postoperative ischemic lesions with the occurrence of sonographic cerebral embolic signals, the presence of plaque ulcerations, and the use of intraoperative shunting. ⋯ These results suggest that the incidence of silent ischemic brain lesions of embolic origin after CEA is low and does not correlate with the occurrence of intraoperative sonographic microemboli. They confirm that CEA is a safe procedure that carries a low risk of postoperative cerebral events.