12 research outputs found

    Association of stroke size and voxelwise ischemic involvement across 582 patients.

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    <p>Larger strokes were associated with more frequent ischemic lesions in the MCA territory of both hemispheres and parts of the posterior circulation while smaller strokes were not associated with more frequent ischemic insults of any brain area. (Red-to-yellow: areas significantly associated with higher crIV, blue-to-lightblue: areas significantly associated with lower crIV across all n = 582 patients; thresholded at FDR-corrected q = 0.01; age and gender included as covariates of no interest, AF status unmodeled).</p

    Differences of infarct locations: New AF versus no AF.

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    <p>(A): New AF was, compared to patients without AF, associated with ischemic lesions in a) the right (peri-) insular cortex and the caput of the right caudate nucleus and b) in the left PCA territory. Patients without AF had significantly more often strokes in the left parietal lobe than patients with new AF. (Red-to-yellow: areas significantly more often associated with strokes in patients with new AF vs. without AF, blue-to-lightblue: vice versa and green: overlap projections; thresholded at FDR-corrected q = 0.01; age and gender were included as covariates of no interest, with infarct volume unaccounted for in this analysis). (B): Including infarct volume into the analysis revealed that no specific brain region was associated with significantly more stroke lesions in patients with new AF compared to patients without AF. Vice versa, patients without AF still had more often left parietal involvement compared to patients with new AF. (Red-to-yellow: areas significantly more often associated with strokes in patients with new AF vs. without AF [none], blue-to-lightblue: vice versa; FDR-corrected q = 0.01; with removal of the confounding effect of cubic root infarct volume normalized for brain size, age and gender).</p

    Voxelwise stroke lesion counts for the whole cohort and the diagnostic subgroups of different AF status.

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    <p>(A): Voxelwise stroke lesion counts and the margins of 1% and 4% total empirical stroke probability for the entire cohort of 582 acute ischemic stroke patients. Note the accumulation of ischemic lesions in the right insula, as illustrated by the 4% stroke probability margin. (Red-to-yellow: stroke lesion counts scaled between 1 to 20 lesions per voxel; green: margin of 1% total empirical stroke probability; blue: margin of 4% total empirical stroke probability). (B): Voxelwise empirical stroke probabilities for patients with new (top), known (middle) and without (bottom) AF. Smaller infarct volumes in patients without AF (cf. <a href="http://www.plosone.org/article/info:doi/10.1371/journal.pone.0177474#pone.0177474.g003" target="_blank">Fig 3</a>) lead to less overlap of the ischemic lesions across subjects and thus much fewer voxels above the 4% empirical stroke probability threshold (set to display for illustration) while for the larger strokes of new and known AF ischemic lesions accumulate in both middle cerebral artery territories and centrally around the insula, in particular. (C): Voxelwise empirical stroke probabilities (thresholded at 10%) reveal that AF (new and known combined) leads to an accumulation of stroke lesions in the right MCA territory and insula, in particular. (AF: atrial fibrillation; MCA: middle cerebral artery).</p

    Clinical characteristics of included patients.

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    <p>(AF: atrial fibrillation; NIHSSS: National Institute of Health Stroke Scale Score; IQR: Interquartile range; n: number; SD: standard deviation).</p
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