Abstract

Women are known to have particular heterogeneity in stroke etiology related to childbearing and hormonal factors. Although there are continued acute stroke treatment advances focusing on clot dissolution or extraction, effective secondary prevention of stroke, however, is dependent on an accurate etiological determination of the stroke. Otherwise, more strokes are likely to follow. Analysis of young women’s stroke etiology in a large stroke registry incorporating contemporary neurovascular and parenchymal imaging and cardiac imaging. Young people (18-49 years old) with stroke were consecutively accrued over a 4 year period and an investigative protocol prospectively applied that incorporated multimodality magnetic resonance imaging, angiography, cardiac echo and stroke relevant blood investigations. All patients were classified according to an expanded Trial of Org 10172 in Acute Stroke Treatment – TOAST – classification and neurological deficit by the National Institute of Health stroke admission scores. In 511 registry derived, young stroke patients (mean age 39.8 years, 95% confidence interval: 39.1; 40.7 years), gender (women n=269, 53%) the etiological categories (women; men) included: i) small vessel disease (30/55;25/55), ii) cardioembolic (16/42;26/42), iii) large vessel cervical and intracranial disease (24/43;19/43), the other category (132/226; 91/226), which included, iv) substance abuse (15/41; 26/41, 4.6), v) prothrombotic states (22/37;15/37), vi) dissection (11/30;19/30), vii) cerebral venous thrombosis (15/19; 4/19, 12.4), viii) vasculitis (8/12; 4/12), ix) migraine related (10/11, 1/11) and x) miscellaneous vasculopathy (38/52;14/52). The latter entities comprised of aortic arch atheroma, vessel redundancy syndrome, vertebrobasilar hypoplasia, arterial fenestrations and dolichoectasia. Some conditions occurred solely in women, such as eclampsia (5), Call Fleming syndrome (4), fibromuscular dysplasia (3) and Moya Moya syndrome (2). Categories aside from bland infarction included: ii) intracerebral hemorrhage (43/106; 63/106) and xiii) stroke of undetermined etiology (6/10; 4/10). Admission mean National Institute of Health Stroke Scale scores differed significantly between women and men (4.7; 6.0 t=1.8, P=0.03). Young women’s stroke is significantly different from men in 7/12 stroke etiological categories in addition to 4 unique subtypes that require specific management.

Highlights

  • Acknowledgments: Ren Chen MD, Bio-statistical Unit, University of South Florida and Ali MalekMD for assistance with directing theThe etiological identification in young Comprehensive Stroke Center, Tampa GeneralAbstract stroke patients, ages

  • Our study focuses on comparing and contrasting stroke etiologies of women and men

  • Men did show a greater etiology of substance abuse

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Summary

Introduction

Acknowledgments: Ren Chen MD, Bio-statistical Unit, University of South Florida and Ali Malek. N the etiological categories (women; men) o included: i) small vessel disease (30/55;25/55), N ii) cardioembolic (16/42;26/42), iii) large vesare much less frequent.[1] Young patients with stroke are often misdiagnosed on initial presentation to the emergency room, especially if they have posterior circulation stroke.[2] Notable advances in the past two decades included multimodality magnetic resonance imaging techniques with improved evaluation and there are several population-based studies of stroke etiology in young adults. The average annual incidence of stroke in patients’ ages 15-49 based on studies in Sweden, Italy, United Kingdom, and in Finland is estimated to be 8.7-11.3 per 100,000.1,3-7 Currently there are no studies comparing stroke etiologies between young men and women. The aim of the present study was to identify and compare stroke etiologies unique to men and women

Materials and Methods
Discussion
Results

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