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New England Medical Center Posterior Circulation Stroke Registry II. Vascular Lesions

Among 407 New England Medical Center Posterior Circulation Registry (NEMC-PCR) patients, the extracranial (ECVA) and intracranial vertebral arteries (ICVA) were the commonest sites of severe occlusive disease followed by the basilar artery (BA). Severe occlusive lesions were found in >1 large art...

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Autores principales: Caplan, LR, Wityk, RJ, Pazdera, L, Chang, H-M, Pessin, MS, DeWitt, LD
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Korean Neurological Association 2005
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2854929/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20396470
http://dx.doi.org/10.3988/jcn.2005.1.1.31
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author Caplan, LR
Wityk, RJ
Pazdera, L
Chang, H-M
Pessin, MS
DeWitt, LD
author_facet Caplan, LR
Wityk, RJ
Pazdera, L
Chang, H-M
Pessin, MS
DeWitt, LD
author_sort Caplan, LR
collection PubMed
description Among 407 New England Medical Center Posterior Circulation Registry (NEMC-PCR) patients, the extracranial (ECVA) and intracranial vertebral arteries (ICVA) were the commonest sites of severe occlusive disease followed by the basilar artery (BA). Severe occlusive lesions were found in >1 large artery in 148 patients; 134 had unilateral or bilateral severe disease at one arterial location. Single arterial site occlusive disease occurred most often in the ECVA (52 patients, 15 bilateral) followed by the ICVA (40 patients, 12 bilateral) and the BA (46 patients). Involvement of the ICVAs and the BA was very common and some patients also had ECVA lesions. Hypertension, smoking, and coronary and peripheral vascular disease were most prevalent in patients with extracranial disease while diabetes and hyperlipidemia were more common when occlusive lesions were only intracranial. Intra-arterial embolism was the most common mechanism of brain infarction in patients with ECVA and ICVA occlusive disease. ICVA occlusive lesions infrequently caused infarction limited to the proximal territory (medulla and posterior inferior cerebellum). BA lesions most often caused infarcts limited to the middle posterior circulation territory (pons and anterior inferior cerebellum). Posterior cerebral artery occlusive lesions were predominantly embolic. Penetrating artery disease caused mostly pontine and thalamic infarcts. Prognosis was poorest in patients with BA disease. The best prognosis surprisingly was in patients who had multiple arterial occlusive lesions; they often had position-sensitive transient ischemic attacks during months or years.
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spelling pubmed-28549292010-04-15 New England Medical Center Posterior Circulation Stroke Registry II. Vascular Lesions Caplan, LR Wityk, RJ Pazdera, L Chang, H-M Pessin, MS DeWitt, LD J Clin Neurol Original Article Among 407 New England Medical Center Posterior Circulation Registry (NEMC-PCR) patients, the extracranial (ECVA) and intracranial vertebral arteries (ICVA) were the commonest sites of severe occlusive disease followed by the basilar artery (BA). Severe occlusive lesions were found in >1 large artery in 148 patients; 134 had unilateral or bilateral severe disease at one arterial location. Single arterial site occlusive disease occurred most often in the ECVA (52 patients, 15 bilateral) followed by the ICVA (40 patients, 12 bilateral) and the BA (46 patients). Involvement of the ICVAs and the BA was very common and some patients also had ECVA lesions. Hypertension, smoking, and coronary and peripheral vascular disease were most prevalent in patients with extracranial disease while diabetes and hyperlipidemia were more common when occlusive lesions were only intracranial. Intra-arterial embolism was the most common mechanism of brain infarction in patients with ECVA and ICVA occlusive disease. ICVA occlusive lesions infrequently caused infarction limited to the proximal territory (medulla and posterior inferior cerebellum). BA lesions most often caused infarcts limited to the middle posterior circulation territory (pons and anterior inferior cerebellum). Posterior cerebral artery occlusive lesions were predominantly embolic. Penetrating artery disease caused mostly pontine and thalamic infarcts. Prognosis was poorest in patients with BA disease. The best prognosis surprisingly was in patients who had multiple arterial occlusive lesions; they often had position-sensitive transient ischemic attacks during months or years. Korean Neurological Association 2005-04 2005-04-30 /pmc/articles/PMC2854929/ /pubmed/20396470 http://dx.doi.org/10.3988/jcn.2005.1.1.31 Text en Copyright © 2005 Korean Neurological Association
spellingShingle Original Article
Caplan, LR
Wityk, RJ
Pazdera, L
Chang, H-M
Pessin, MS
DeWitt, LD
New England Medical Center Posterior Circulation Stroke Registry II. Vascular Lesions
title New England Medical Center Posterior Circulation Stroke Registry II. Vascular Lesions
title_full New England Medical Center Posterior Circulation Stroke Registry II. Vascular Lesions
title_fullStr New England Medical Center Posterior Circulation Stroke Registry II. Vascular Lesions
title_full_unstemmed New England Medical Center Posterior Circulation Stroke Registry II. Vascular Lesions
title_short New England Medical Center Posterior Circulation Stroke Registry II. Vascular Lesions
title_sort new england medical center posterior circulation stroke registry ii. vascular lesions
topic Original Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2854929/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20396470
http://dx.doi.org/10.3988/jcn.2005.1.1.31
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