Stroke, Vol 25, 2138-2141, Copyright © 1994 by American Heart Association
DC Tong, A Bolger and GW Albers
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Transcranial Doppler can detect cerebral
microemboli. These emboli may be a risk factor for embolic stroke. We
studied the prevalence of microemboli in patients referred for
echocardiography. METHODS: Forty-two patients were evaluated. Patients were
studied with continuous monitoring over one middle cerebral artery for 30
minutes, and the number of microemboli was recorded. Patients were divided
into three groups, those with prosthetic heart valves (group A, n = 15),
atrial fibrillation (group B, n = 14), and no major cardiac risk factor
(group C, n = 14). RESULTS: Seventeen percent (7 of 42) of all patients had
microemboli. In group A, 5 of 15 (33%) had microemboli. In group B, 2 of 13
(15%) patients had microemboli. Twenty- five percent (7 of 28) of patients
in groups A and B combined (A+B) had microemboli. No patients (0 of 14) in
group C had microemboli. Groups A and A+B had significantly more emboli
than group C (P < .05). Prosthetic heart valve patients with emboli more
commonly had a history of prior stroke than valve patients without emboli
(3 of 5 versus 2 of 10). The number of emboli seen per 30-minute monitoring
session was greater in patients with a prior history of stroke than in
patients without (10 microemboli versus 3). CONCLUSIONS: Microemboli can be
found in a significant percentage of selected patients referred for
echocardiography. The prevalence of microembolism is greater in patients
with a known high risk of embolization (eg, prosthetic valves) and less in
patients with a lower risk of embolization (eg, atrial fibrillation). These
microemboli may be associated with an increased prevalence of previous
stroke in patients with prosthetic valves.
ARTICLES
Incidence of transcranial Doppler-detected cerebral microemboli in patients referred for echocardiography
Department of Neurology and Neurological Sciences, Stanford University Medical Center, Palo Alto, CA.
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