Abstract

Here (and in an accompanying article dealing with definitions, differential diagnosis and registration), a structured sequential diagnostic flow is proposed to discern clinical phenotypes for perinatal stroke, including arterial ischaemic stroke (AIS), cerebral sinovenous thrombosis (CSVT) and haemorrhagic stroke. For neonatal AIS, the diagnostic sequence is infection, trauma, embolism, arteriopathy, other, primary thrombosis and unclassifiable; for neonatal CSVT, the sequence is infection, trauma, venopathy, other, primary thrombosis and unclassifiable. The proposed hierarchical diagnostic flows are an initial step towards a standard for registration of the causes of neonatal stroke. Such standardization should guide attempts at prevention and intervention. An extensive literature search and study of a retrospective cohort of 134 newborn infants with stroke suggest that embolism is the most common identifiable cause for stroke in general (25%), preceding trauma (10%) and infection (8%). Other causes, such as asphyxia, acute blood loss, extracorporeal membrane oxygenation, genetic disorders or prothrombotic conditions, are seen in <5% of cases. For neonatal AIS, the presence of an embolic phenotype is 33% in this cohort. The designation unclassifiable scored 34% for the entire stroke group and 25% for neonatal AIS. Complex arterial stroke with multiple arteries involved is often seen when the underlying cause is infection, cranial trauma or embolism. One important conclusion is that a means of prevention is avoidance of embolism from thrombosis outside the brain. To prevent the occurrence and recurrence of neonatal ischaemic stroke, clinicians must develop a standardized diagnostic approach that results in characterization of the clinical phenotype.

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