54 research outputs found

    Valuing biomarker diagnostics for dementia care: enhancing the reflection of patients, their care-givers and members of the wider public

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    Contains fulltext : 207352.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access

    Differences in cerebral small vessel disease magnetic resonance imaging markers between lacunar stroke and non Lobar intracerebral hemorrhage

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    Introduction: It is unclear why cerebral small vessel disease (SVD) leads to lacunar stroke in some and to non-lobar intracerebral hemorrhage (ICH) in others. We investigated differences in MRI markers of SVD in patients with lacunar stroke or non-lobar ICH.Patients and methods: We included patients from two prospective cohort studies with either lacunar stroke (RUN DMC) or non-lobar ICH (FETCH). Differences in SVD markers (white matter hyperintensities [WMH], lacunes, cerebral microbleeds [CMB]) between groups were investigated with univariable tests; multivariable logistic regression analysis, adjusted for age, sex, and vascular risk factors; spatial correlation analysis and voxel-wise lesion symptom mapping.Results: We included 82 patients with lacunar stroke (median age 63, IQR 57-72) and 54 with non-lobar ICH (66, 59-75). WMH volumes and distribution were not different between groups. Lacunes were more frequent in patients with a lacunar stroke (44% vs. 17%, adjusted odds ratio [aOR] 5.69, 95% CI [1.66-22.75]) compared to patients with a non-lobar ICH. CMB were more frequent in patients with a non-lobar ICH (71% vs. 23%, aOR for lacunar stroke vs non-lobar ICH 0.08 95% CI [0.02-0.26]), and more often located in non-lobar regions compared to CMB in lacunar stroke.Discussion: Although we obserd different types of MRI markers of SVD within the same patient, ischemic markers of SVD were more frequent in the ischemic type of lacunar stroke, and hemorrhagic markers were more prevalent in the hemorrhagic phenotype of non-lobar ICH.Conclusion: There are differences between MRI markers of SVD between patients with a lacunar stroke and those with a non-lobar ICH.Paroxysmal Cerebral Disorder

    Cerebellar superficial siderosis in cerebral amyloid angiopathy

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    Background and Purpose: Although evidence accumulates that the cerebellum is involved in cerebral amyloid angiopathy (CAA), cerebellar superficial siderosis is not considered to be a disease marker. The objective of this study is to investigate cerebellar superficial siderosis frequency and its relation to hemorrhagic magnetic resonance imaging markers in patients with sporadic and Dutch-type hereditary CAA and patients with deep perforating arteriopathy-related intracerebral hemorrhage. Methods: We recruited patients from 3 prospective 3 Tesla magnetic resonance imaging studies and scored siderosis and hemorrhages. Cerebellar siderosis was identified as hypointense linear signal loss (black) on susceptibility-weighted or T2*-weighted magnetic resonance imaging which follows at least one folia of the cerebellar cortex (including the vermis). Results: We included 50 subjects with Dutch-type hereditary CAA, (mean age 50 years), 45 with sporadic CAA (mean age 72 years), and 43 patients with deep perforating arteriopathy-related intracerebral hemorrhage (mean age 54 years). Cerebellar superficial siderosis was present in 5 out of 50 (10% [95% CI, 2-18]) patients with Dutch-type hereditary CAA, 4/45 (9% [95% CI, 1-17]) patients with sporadic CAA, and 0 out of 43 (0% [95% CI, 0-8]) patients with deep perforating arteriopathy-related intracerebral hemorrhage. Patients with cerebellar superficial siderosis had more supratentorial lobar (median number 9 versus 2, relative risk, 2.9 [95% CI, 2.5-3.4]) and superficial cerebellar macrobleeds (median number 2 versus 0, relative risk, 20.3 [95% CI, 8.6-47.6]) compared with patients without the marker. The frequency of cortical superficial siderosis and superficial cerebellar microbleeds was comparable. Conclusions: We conclude that cerebellar superficial siderosis might be a novel marker for CAA.Paroxysmal Cerebral Disorder

    Association between eye position on brain scan and hospital mortality in acute intracerebral hemorrhage

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    Item does not contain fulltextBACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Conjugate eye deviation (CED) and horizontal skew deviation are often seen in patients with intracerebral hemorrhage (ICH), but its prognostic significance is unclear. In this study, the association between brain scan assessed eye position and hospital mortality in patients with supratentorial ICH was tested. METHODS: A retrospective analysis was performed in 316 patients with supratentorial ICH. Eye position was measured on first brain computed tomography or magnetic resonance imaging. Patients with CED, horizontal skew deviation or no deviation were distinguished. The association between eye position and hospital mortality was assessed using logistic regression analysis. RESULTS: Conjugate eye deviation was present in 96 (30.4%), skew deviation in 44 (13.9%) and no deviation in 176 (55.7%) patients. In patients with CED, 81.3% had an eye position to the ipsilateral side of the hemorrhage. In univariable regression analysis, skew deviation was associated with mortality (odds ratio 3.10, 95% confidence interval 1.57-6.11; P = 0.001). In multivariable regression analysis, adjusting for age, ICH volume, intraventricular extension and Glasgow Coma Scale, eye position was not independently associated with mortality. CONCLUSION: Horizontal skew eyes were found to be an unfavorable prognostic factor. However, this was not independent of other important predictors of ICH mortality and is most probably explained by its association with worse initial clinical presentation

    Orthogonal B-Mode Evaluation of Common Carotid Artery Plaques Reveals the Absence of Outward Remodeling

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    Item does not contain fulltextTo properly assess morphologic and dynamic parameters of arteries and plaques, we propose the concept of orthogonal distance measurements, that is, measurements made perpendicular to the local lumen axis rather than along the ultrasound beam (vertical direction for a linear array). The aim of this study was to compare orthogonal and vertical artery and lumen diameters at the site of a plaque in the common carotid artery (CCA). Moreover, we investigated the interrelationship of orthogonal diameters and plaque size and the association of artery parameters with plaque echogenicity. In 29 patients, we acquired a longitudinal B-mode ultrasound recording of plaques at the posterior CCA wall. After semi-automatic segmentation of end-diastolic frames, diameters were extracted orthogonally along the lumen axis. To establish inter-observer variability of diameters obtained at the location of maximal plaque thickness, a second observer repeated the analysis (subset N = 21). Orthogonal adventitia-adventitia and lumen diameters could be determined with good precision (coefficient of variation: 1%-5%. However, the precision of the change in lumen diameter from diastole to systole (distension) at the site of the plaque was poor (21%-50%). The orthogonal lumen diameter was significantly smaller than the vertical lumen diameter (p <0.001). Surprisingly, the plaques did not cause outward remodeling, that is, a local increase in adventitia-adventitia distance at the site of the plaque. The intra- and inter-observer precision of diastolic-systolic plaque compression was poor and of the same order as the standard deviation of plaque compression. The orthogonal relative lumen distension was significantly lower for echogenic plaques, indicating a higher stiffness, than for echolucent plaques (p <0.01). In conclusion, we illustrated the feasibility of extracting orthogonal CCA and plaque dimensions, albeit that the proposed approach is inadequate to quantify plaque compression

    Mortality after primary intracerebral hemorrhage in relation to post-stroke seizures

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    Contains fulltext : 182353.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)Seizures after intracerebral hemorrhage are repeatedly seen. Whether the development of seizures after intracerebral hemorrhage affects survival in the long term is unknown. This study aims to determine the relation between seizures (i.e., with and without anti-epileptic therapy) and long-term mortality risk in a large patient population with intracerebral hemorrhage. We retrospectively included patients with a non-traumatic ICH in all three hospitals in the South Limburg region in the Netherlands between January 1st 2004 and December 31st 2009, and we assessed all-cause mortality until March 14th 2016. Patient who did not survive the first seven days after intracerebral hemorrhage were excluded from analyses. We used Cox multivariate analyses to determine independent predictors of mortality. Of 1214 patients, 783 hemorrhagic stroke patients fulfilled the inclusion criteria, amongst whom 37 (4.7%) patients developed early seizures (within 7 days after hemorrhage) and 77 (9.8%) developed late seizures (more than 7 days after hemorrhage). Seizure development was not significantly related to mortality risk after correction for conventional vascular risk factors and hemorrhage severity. However, we found a small but independent relation between the use of anti-epileptic drugs and a lower long-term mortality (HR = 0.32, 95% CI 0.11-0.91). In our large population, seizures and epilepsy did not relate independently to an increased mortality risk after hemorrhage

    Standard B-Mode Ultrasound Measures Local Carotid Artery Characteristics as Reliably as Radiofrequency Phase Tracking in Symptomatic Carotid Artery Patients

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    Item does not contain fulltextLocal arterial stiffness can be assessed with high accuracy and precision by measuring arterial distension on the basis of phase tracking of radiofrequency ultrasound signals acquired at a high frame rate. However, in clinical practice, B-mode ultrasound registrations are made at a low frame rate (20-50 Hz). We compared the accuracy and intra-subject precision of edge tracking and phase tracking distension in symptomatic carotid artery patients. B-mode ultrasound recordings (40 mm, 37 fps) and radiofrequency recordings (31 lines covering 29 mm, 300 fps) were acquired from the left common carotid artery of 30 patients (aged 45-88 y) with recent cerebrovascular events. To extract the distension, semi-automatic echo edge and phase tracking algorithms were applied to B-mode and radiofrequency recordings, respectively. Both methods exhibited a similar intra-subject precision for distension (standard deviation = 44 mum and 47 mum, p = 0.66) and mean distension (difference: -6 +/- 69 mum, p = 0.67). Intra-subject distension inhomogeneity tends to be larger for edge tracking (difference: 15 +/- 35 mum, p = 0.04). Standard B-mode scanners are suitable for measuring local artery characteristics in symptomatic carotid artery patients with good precision and accuracy
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