Abstract

Background: Ischemic lesions on diffusion weighted imaging (DWI) occur in one-third of intracerebral hemorrhage (ICH). Due to conflicting prior studies, it is uncertain if the degree of systolic blood pressure reduction increases the risk. Patients with severe, chronic hypertension may be more vulnerable to the development of ischemia after ICH due to altered cerebral autoregulatory limits. Using cardiac remodeling as a biomarker for severe chronic hypertension, we hypothesized that the presence of left ventricular hypertrophy (LVH) is associated with DWI lesions. Methods: Patients with spontaneous ICH enrolled in the Intracerebral Hemorrhage Outcomes Project who underwent DWI imaging and transthoracic echocardiography (TTE) during hospitalization were included. Lesions were identified as hyperintensities >10mm remote from the hematoma with corresponding low ADC signal. LVH presence was identified using clinically obtained TTE reports with imaging evidence of moderate-severe left ventricular wall thickness. The relationship between LVH and DWI ischemic lesions was assessed with logistic regression modeling after adjusting for age, ICH volume, intraventricular hemorrhage, hypertension history, and blood pressure change within 24 hours. A secondary analysis using linear regression assessed the association with the number of DWI lesions adjusting for similar covariates. Results: Of 187 patients analyzed, DWI lesions were observed in 30.5% and LVH was seen in 23.5%. In our logistic regression analyses, we identified that LVH was associated with DWI lesions (adjusted OR 2.77, CI: 1.19-6.40). Separate sensitivity analyses adjusting for sex (OR 2.47, CI 1.05-5.83) and race (OR 2.52, CI 1.08-5.91) did not change these relationships. In secondary analysis, we identified that LVH was associated with increased DWI lesion number (B 1.018, CI 0.40-1.63 ). Discussion: LVH is associated with the presence and burden of DWI lesions. Further work is required to assess aggregate relationships of chronic hypertension/LVH, acute blood pressure change, ischemic lesions, and ICH outcomes to determine whether patients with LVH necessitate different acute blood pressure treatment goals.

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