Kathleen Daly (1898-1994), a Canadian artist painted
this awkward staircase and the dysfunctional corner which is a thing of beauty using
oil on canvas. Courtesy of the National Gallery of Canada. (http://www.gallery.ca/en/), Ottawa,
Ontario
Published by JAMA 2015 Vol 313:226-227
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Monday, January 26, 2015
L'escalier canadien
Friday, January 16, 2015
Screening for Asymptomatic Carotid Artery Stenosis
Developer: US Preventive Services Task Force (USPSTF)
Release
date: July 8, 2014
Prior
version: December 18, 2007
Funding
source: US Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ)
Target
population: Asymptomatic adults in the general population
Major
recommendation: Do not screen for asymptomatic
carotid artery stenosis in the general adult population (Grade D
recommendation)
Saturday, January 10, 2015
The ENDOSTROKE Study
Singer
et al in a study that was conducted at six centers and published in Radiology assessed the significance and
role of collateral circulation in160 patients with proximal middle cerebral artery
(MCA) occlusion; The ENDOSTROKE study.
Collateral vessel status was assessed at
angiography by using the American Society of Interventional and Therapeutic
Neuroradiology (ASITN) Society of Interventional Radiology (SIR) collateral
vessel grading system, while using the Thrombolysis in Cerebral Infarction
(TICI) scale assessed reperfusion. Good outcome was defined as a modified
Rankin Scale score of 0–2 at follow-up.
Good clinical outcome was attained in 62 (39%) of
the 160 patients, and TICI 2b–3 reperfusion was achieved in 94 (59%) patients.
Nineteen patients had ASITN/SIR collateral vessel grades of 0 or 1, 63 patients
had a grade of 2, and 78 patients had grades of 3 or 4.
Better collateral vessels were associated with
higher reperfusion rates (21%, 48%, and 77% for ASITN/SIR grades of 0 or 1, 2,
and 3 or 4, respectively; P < .001), a higher proportion of infarcts
smaller than one-third of the MCA territory (32%, 48%, and 69% for ASITN/SIR
grades of 0 or 1, 2, and 3 or 4, respectively; P < .001), and a
higher proportion of good clinical outcome (11%, 35%, and 49% for ASITN/SIR grades
of 0 or 1, 2, and 3 or 4, respectively; P = .007). At multivariable
analysis, collateral vessel status independently predicted reperfusion, final
infarct size, and clinical outcome. Within an onset-to-treatment time (OTT) of
0–3 hours, collateral vessel status predicted final infarct size and
reperfusion. Within an OTT of 3–6 hours, it additionally predicted clinical
outcome, with 53% of patients with ASITN/SIR grades of 3 or 4 having a good
outcome, as compared with 0% of patients with grades of 0 or 1 and 27% of
patients with a grade of 2 (P = .008).
The researchers concluded that collateral
circulation independently predicted parameters such as reperfusion, infarct
size, and clinical outcome.
Sunday, January 4, 2015
CT identifies TIA patients at high risk for Stroke
Wasserman et al in a study published by
the journal Stroke report that computed
tomography (CT) findings can predict subsequent stroke on patients with
transient ischemic attacks (TIA).
Their multicenter prospective cohort study
enrolled a total of 2028 patients; 814 of who had ischemic changes on CT and
were patients with a clinical diagnosis of an transient ischemic attack or non-disabling
stroke and had CT scanning within 24 hours of the event. Primary outcome was
subsequent stroke within 90 days. Secondary outcomes were stroke at ≤2 or >2
days. CT findings were classified as acute or chronic ischemia present or
absent and or microangiopathy.
The stroke rate was 3.4% at 90 days and
1.5% at ≤2 days. Stroke risk was greater if baseline CT showed acute ischemia
alone (10.6%; P=0.002), it was higher in patients with CT findings of acute and
chronic ischemia (17.4%; P=0.007), and in those with acute ischemia and microangiopathy
(17.6%; P=0.019), and the highest when CT findings of all three acute, chronic
ischemia and microangiopathy were present (25.0%; P=0.029).
They concluded that patients
with transient ischemic attack/non-disabling stroke, subtle CT findings of
acute ischemia alone or acute ischemia with chronic ischemia or microangiopathy
were associated with increased subsequent stroke risk between 10-25% within 90
days.
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