Clinical and Prognostic Correlates of Stroke Subtype Misdiagnosis Within 12 Hours From Onset
- 1 October 1995
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Stroke
- Vol. 26 (10) , 1837-1840
- https://doi.org/10.1161/01.str.26.10.1837
Abstract
Background and Purpose Pure motor hemiparesis and sensorimotor stroke syndromes are not accurate predictors of lacunar infarct when described in the first 12 hours of stroke onset. We evaluate here whether this inaccuracy of clinical diagnosis might have influenced the planning of patient management either in routine practice or in therapeutic trials. Methods A consecutive hospital series of 517 first-ever ischemic hemispheric stroke patients presented lacunar or nonlacunar syndromes at the first examination within 12 hours of the event. A distinction was subsequently made, by means of a CT scan or autopsy performed within 15±2 days of stroke, between patients affected by lacunar or nonlacunar infarcts. We compared stroke risk factors, considered to be indicative of potential pathogenetic mechanisms, and the clinical outcome of lacunar infarct versus nonlacunar infarct patients and those of lacunar syndrome versus nonlacunar syndrome patients. Results Two hundred nineteen patients (42%) presented a lacunar syndrome and 298 (58%) a nonlacunar syndrome, while 170 (33%) had lacunar infarcts and 347 (67%) nonlacunar infarcts. Lacunar infarct patients were more frequently associated with hypertension and a previous transient ischemic attack and less frequently with atrial fibrillation when compared with their nonlacunar infarct counterparts, whereas no differences were apparent between lacunar syndrome and nonlacunar syndrome patients. Logistic regression analysis showed that hypertension and a previous transient ischemic attack on the one hand and atrial fibrillation on the other were strongly correlated with the diagnosis of lacunar infarct and nonlacunar infarct, respectively, while no risk factor was correlated with the diagnosis of lacunar syndrome. Twenty-two percent of lacunar infarct patients and 68% of nonlacunar infarct subjects had a poor outcome (death plus disability of survivors) as opposed to 40% of lacunar syndrome and 63% of nonlacunar syndrome patients. Logistic regression selected age, severity of neurological deficit at entry, cardiopathies, diabetes, and lacunar infarct, but not lacunar syndrome, as predictors of outcome. Conclusions The inaccurate clinical diagnosis of lacunar infarct made in the first 12 hours of stroke might lead to no distinction being made between stroke subgroups with potentially different pathogenetic mechanisms and prognostic estimates, thus negatively influencing the planning of patient management.Keywords
This publication has 10 references indexed in Scilit:
- Progressing Neurological Deficit Secondary to Acute Ischemic StrokeArchives of Neurology, 1995
- Prediction of Long-term Outcome in the Early Hours Following Acute Ischemic StrokeArchives of Neurology, 1995
- The ischemic penumbra, injury thresholds, and the therapeutic window for acute strokeAnnals of Neurology, 1994
- Population-Based in-hospital stroke morbidity and mortalityJournal Of Stroke & Cerebrovascular Diseases, 1992
- Lacunar Syndromes Not due to Lacunar InfarctsCerebrovascular Diseases, 1992
- Pathophysiology of acute ischaemic strokeThe Lancet, 1992
- Classification and natural history of clinically identifiable subtypes of cerebral infarctionPublished by Elsevier ,1991
- Infarcts with a cardiac source of embolism in the NINCDS Stroke Data BankNeurology, 1990
- TIAsNeurology, 1988
- Risk factors in lacunar syndromes: a case-control studyActa Neurologica Scandinavica, 1988