Hemorrhagic transformation of brain infarct
- 1 February 1996
- journal article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Neurology
- Vol. 46 (2) , 341-345
- https://doi.org/10.1212/wnl.46.2.341
Abstract
Objective: To identify, in the first 5 hours of acute brain infarct, clinical and radiologic predictors of subsequent hemorrhagic transformation (HT), and to evaluate its influence on the clinical course. Background: The identification of early predictors of HT might be important to plan antithrombotic or thrombolytic treatments. Patients: One hundred fifty consecutive patients with cerebral anterior circulation infarct systematically underwent a first CT within 5 hours of onset. During the first week after stroke, we performed a repeat CT or autopsy to look for HT. Outcome measures were early neurologic deterioration within the first week of onset and 30-day case fatality rate and disability. Results: HT was observed in 65 patients (43%): 58 (89%) had a petechial HT and seven (11%) a hematoma. Among initial clinical and CT findings, the only independent predictor of HT was early focal hypodensity. Its presence was associated with subsequent HT in 77% of cases (95% CI, 68 to 86%), whereas its absence predicted the absence of subsequent HT in 94% of cases (95% CI, 89 to 99%). No baseline clinical or CT characteristic differentiated patients with petechial HT from those with hematoma. Antithrombotic and antiplatelet agents did not influence the occurrence of either type of HT. The frequency of early neurologic deterioration and of 30-day death or disability in HT patients was twice as high as in those without HT. However, a large-sized infarct and the presence of mass effect at the repeat CT or autopsy were the only factors independently linked to both the outcome events, irrespective of the development of HT. Clinical evolution of HT patients given antithrombotics was comparable with that of HT patients not receiving these drugs. Conclusions: HT of a brain infarct is a common event that occurs independently of anticoagulation and can be reliably predicted as early as 5 hours from stroke onset by the presence of focal hypodensity at CT. Apart from the infrequent cases of massive hematoma, HT does not influence prognosis, whereas a poor outcome in HT patients is correlated with a higher frequency of large edematous infarcts in this subgroup. The clinical course and final outcome of HT in anticoagulated patients does not differ from that of non-anticoagulated HT patients. NEUROLOGY 1966;46: 341-345Keywords
This publication has 9 references indexed in Scilit:
- Australian Streptokinase Trial (ASK)Published by Springer Nature ,1993
- The European Cooperative Acute Stroke Study (ECASS)Published by Springer Nature ,1993
- Death and functional outcome after spontaneous intracerebral hemorrhage. A prospective study of 166 cases using multivariate analysis.Stroke, 1991
- Neurovascular compression and essential hypertensionNeuroradiology, 1991
- One-year MR imaging follow-up of patients with multiple sclerosis under cortisone therapyNeuroradiology, 1989
- Cardiac abnormalities in stroke patients with negative arteriograms.Stroke, 1986
- EC/IC Bypass Study.Stroke, 1986
- 1983 ReviewersArchives of Neurology, 1983
- Anticoagulant vs anti-platelet therapy as prophylactic against cerebral infarction in transient ischemic attacks.Stroke, 1980