Stroke, Vol 25, 771-775, Copyright © 1994 by American Heart Association
T Itoh, M Matsumoto, N Handa, H Maeda, H Hougaku, Y Tsukamoto, H Kondo, J Tanouchi and T Kamada
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: This study was designed to test the hypothesis that
paradoxical embolization would be a cause of embolic strokes and transient
ischemic attacks in patients with stroke of uncertain etiology in all age
groups. METHODS: Thirty patients who had stroke of uncertain etiology were
studied. They were divided into the following three groups: 13 patients
with sudden onset (group A), 11 patients with subacute onset (group B), and
6 asymptomatic stroke patients (group C). Eleven patients with stroke of
obvious etiology (group D) and 11 normal healthy volunteers (group E) were
also studied as controls. In all patients transcranial Doppler sonography
and contrast echocardiography were recorded simultaneously after
intravenous injection of the contrast medium. Findings of positive patient
foramen ovale in contrast echocardiography or "chirp" sounds in
transcranial Doppler sonography were defined as positive for paradoxical
contrast embolization. Radioisotope phlebography of the lower extremities
and pulmonary scintigraphy, using technetium-99 macroaggregated albumin,
were performed in all 17 patients who had positive findings of paradoxical
contrast embolization and in 12 patients whose findings were negative.
RESULTS: Positive findings of paradoxical contrast embolization were found
in 17 subjects by transcranial Doppler sonography but in only 8 on contrast
echocardiography. These positive findings were detected more frequently in
group A (77%) than in groups B, D, and E (9%, 18%, and 9%, respectively) (P
< .05). In group C, 4 of 6 patients (67%) had positive findings. There
were positive findings on both phlebography and pulmonary scintigraphy only
in 6 group A patients, with positive findings of paradoxical contrast
embolization. CONCLUSIONS: Transcranial Doppler sonography is a sensitive
detector of right-to- left shunts. Paradoxical cerebral embolization might
be frequent in patients with stroke of unknown etiology, especially when
the stroke is of sudden onset.
ARTICLES
Paradoxical embolism as a cause of ischemic stroke of uncertain etiology. A transcranial Doppler sonographic study
First Department of Internal Medicine, Osaka University Medical School, Japan.
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