Stroke, Vol 16, 950-956, Copyright © 1985 by American Heart Association
JA Rem, VC Hachinski, DR Boughner and HJ Barnett
One hundred and eighty-four consecutive patients admitted to an
Investigative Stroke Unit with transient ischemic attacks (TIA) and
cerebral infarction (stroke) had 48-hour automated arrhythmia monitoring,
55 patients had additional Holter monitoring and 127 patients had 2-D
echocardiography. One hundred and sixteen presented with stroke (63%) and
68 patients with TIA (37%). One hundred and twenty-two were men (66.3%) and
62 were women (33.7%), mean age 63.5 years, range 25-86. The monitoring
identified twelve (6.5%) patients with significant arrhythmias undetected
by history, examination and admission electrocardiogram: six with atrial
fibrillation (AF), four with 2 degrees heart block type Mobitz II and one
each with 3 degrees heart block and sick sinus syndrome. Two-D
echocardiography showed a previously unknown potential source for cardiac
emboli in 22 patients (17.3%): segmental ventricular disease in eleven,
mitral valve prolapse in seven, left ventricular thrombus in six, left
ventricular aneurysm in three and one each with mitral valve endocarditis
and global myocardial dysfunction. Only the mitral valve findings were
expected on the basis of a previous M-mode echocardiographic study carried
out in our city on healthy elderly volunteers. From the clinical history
and all cardiac investigations, we found 59 patients (32%) with a possible
cardiac source for cerebral emboli. After cerebral angiography, 29 of these
59 patients also showed a vascular lesion in the appropriate carotid artery
and we could not decide definitely which lesion was responsible for the
cerebral embolus. In the remaining 30 patients (16.4%), the evidence
implicated the heart as the most likely source.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250
WORDS)
ARTICLES
Value of cardiac monitoring and echocardiography in TIA and stroke patients
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