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Cerebral embolism in the Michael Reese Stroke Registry.

244

Citations

27

References

1983

Year

Abstract

Infarction secondary to cerebral embolism was diagnosed in 127 (23.5%) of 540 patients in the Michael Reese Stroke Registry. Coronary artery disease, atrial fibrillation, valvular heart disease, mitral annulus calcification, and cardiomyopathy were the commonest etiologies. Echocardiography documented a potential embolic source in 7 patients without previously known heart disease, and clarified the cardiac pathology in many of the patients with known heart disease. The left anterior circulation was affected in 48%, right anterior in 37%, and posterior circulation in 15% of patients. CT was abnormal in 71% of the patients, and was approximately equally helpful in all locations. Nineteen percent of emboli presented with a deficit that was other than maximal at onset. Concurrent systemic embolism was unusual (2.3%). Prognosis was somewhat worse than in thrombotic stroke. Grouping of patients according to embolic source (intra-arterial, cardiac, and uncertain source) showed no differences in activity at onset, early course, or in subsequent course of the illness.

References

YearCitations

1978

1.2K

1965

594

1973

370

1962

259

1977

249

1981

238

1935

184

1976

166

1982

153

1971

152

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