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Eleven years of experience with the neurologic complications in Korean patients with acute aortic dissection: a retrospective study

BACKGROUND: This study attempts to explore the clinical features, possible mechanisms and prognosis of the neurologic complications in patients with acute aortic dissection (AD). METHODS: Medical records of 278 consecutive patients with AD (165 with type A and 113 with type B dissection) over 11.5 y...

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Autores principales: Lee, Seung-Jae, Kim, Jae-Hyun, Na, Chan-Young, Oh, Sam-Sae, Kim, Yang-Min, Lee, Chang-Keun, Lim, Dal-Soo
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3664074/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23692963
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2377-13-46
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author Lee, Seung-Jae
Kim, Jae-Hyun
Na, Chan-Young
Oh, Sam-Sae
Kim, Yang-Min
Lee, Chang-Keun
Lim, Dal-Soo
author_facet Lee, Seung-Jae
Kim, Jae-Hyun
Na, Chan-Young
Oh, Sam-Sae
Kim, Yang-Min
Lee, Chang-Keun
Lim, Dal-Soo
author_sort Lee, Seung-Jae
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: This study attempts to explore the clinical features, possible mechanisms and prognosis of the neurologic complications in patients with acute aortic dissection (AD). METHODS: Medical records of 278 consecutive patients with AD (165 with type A and 113 with type B dissection) over 11.5 years were retrospectively analyzed for clinical history, CT findings, neurologic complications and outcome. Neurologic complications were classified into early-onset or delayed-onset complications. Independent t-test or Chi-square test (or Fisher exact test) was used for comparing the different groups. Multivariable logistic regression analysis was performed to determine the independent association between variables. RESULTS: The mean age of the included patients (145 male and 133 female) was 59.4 years (range 19–91 years). 41 patients (14.7%) had a neurologic complication, which included 21 with early-onset complication and 23 with delayed-onset complication, including 3 with both. Advanced age and classic type of dissection were independently associated with the neurologic complication in patients with type A dissection. The most frequent manifestation was ischemic stroke (26 patients, 9.4%), followed by hypoxic encephalopathy (9, 3.2%), ischemic neuropathy (5, 1.8%), spinal cord ischemia (5, 1.8%), seizure (2, 0.7%), hoarseness (1, 0.4%) and septic encephalopathy (1, 0.4%). Overall in-hospital mortality was 10.1%, whereas the complicated group had a mortality rate of 43.9%. Renal impairment, pulse deficit, neurologic complication and nonsurgical treatment were independent variables for determining in-hospital mortality in patients with type A dissection. CONCLUSIONS: The dominance of neurologic symptom in the early stage of AD may make its early diagnosis difficult. Besides chest pain and widened mediastinum in chest x-ray, variable neurologic symptoms including left hemiparesis with asymmetric pulse and hypotension may suggest underlying AD.
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spelling pubmed-36640742013-05-26 Eleven years of experience with the neurologic complications in Korean patients with acute aortic dissection: a retrospective study Lee, Seung-Jae Kim, Jae-Hyun Na, Chan-Young Oh, Sam-Sae Kim, Yang-Min Lee, Chang-Keun Lim, Dal-Soo BMC Neurol Research Article BACKGROUND: This study attempts to explore the clinical features, possible mechanisms and prognosis of the neurologic complications in patients with acute aortic dissection (AD). METHODS: Medical records of 278 consecutive patients with AD (165 with type A and 113 with type B dissection) over 11.5 years were retrospectively analyzed for clinical history, CT findings, neurologic complications and outcome. Neurologic complications were classified into early-onset or delayed-onset complications. Independent t-test or Chi-square test (or Fisher exact test) was used for comparing the different groups. Multivariable logistic regression analysis was performed to determine the independent association between variables. RESULTS: The mean age of the included patients (145 male and 133 female) was 59.4 years (range 19–91 years). 41 patients (14.7%) had a neurologic complication, which included 21 with early-onset complication and 23 with delayed-onset complication, including 3 with both. Advanced age and classic type of dissection were independently associated with the neurologic complication in patients with type A dissection. The most frequent manifestation was ischemic stroke (26 patients, 9.4%), followed by hypoxic encephalopathy (9, 3.2%), ischemic neuropathy (5, 1.8%), spinal cord ischemia (5, 1.8%), seizure (2, 0.7%), hoarseness (1, 0.4%) and septic encephalopathy (1, 0.4%). Overall in-hospital mortality was 10.1%, whereas the complicated group had a mortality rate of 43.9%. Renal impairment, pulse deficit, neurologic complication and nonsurgical treatment were independent variables for determining in-hospital mortality in patients with type A dissection. CONCLUSIONS: The dominance of neurologic symptom in the early stage of AD may make its early diagnosis difficult. Besides chest pain and widened mediastinum in chest x-ray, variable neurologic symptoms including left hemiparesis with asymmetric pulse and hypotension may suggest underlying AD. BioMed Central 2013-05-21 /pmc/articles/PMC3664074/ /pubmed/23692963 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2377-13-46 Text en Copyright © 2013 Lee et al.; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Lee, Seung-Jae
Kim, Jae-Hyun
Na, Chan-Young
Oh, Sam-Sae
Kim, Yang-Min
Lee, Chang-Keun
Lim, Dal-Soo
Eleven years of experience with the neurologic complications in Korean patients with acute aortic dissection: a retrospective study
title Eleven years of experience with the neurologic complications in Korean patients with acute aortic dissection: a retrospective study
title_full Eleven years of experience with the neurologic complications in Korean patients with acute aortic dissection: a retrospective study
title_fullStr Eleven years of experience with the neurologic complications in Korean patients with acute aortic dissection: a retrospective study
title_full_unstemmed Eleven years of experience with the neurologic complications in Korean patients with acute aortic dissection: a retrospective study
title_short Eleven years of experience with the neurologic complications in Korean patients with acute aortic dissection: a retrospective study
title_sort eleven years of experience with the neurologic complications in korean patients with acute aortic dissection: a retrospective study
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3664074/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23692963
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2377-13-46
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