Brain Sciences (Jul 2022)

Association between Deep Medullary Veins in the Unaffected Hemisphere and Functional Outcome in Acute Cardioembolic Stroke: An Observational Retrospective Study

  • Chen Ye,
  • Junfeng Liu,
  • Chenchen Wei,
  • Yanan Wang,
  • Quhong Song,
  • Ruosu Pan,
  • Wendan Tao,
  • Bo Wu,
  • Ming Liu

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/brainsci12080978
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 8
p. 978

Abstract

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Objective: To explore whether deep medullary veins (DMVs) in the unaffected hemisphere were associated with functional outcome in acute cardioembolic stroke patients. Methods: Acute cardioembolic stroke patients at a single center were retrospectively included. DMVs visibility in the unaffected hemisphere was assessed using a well-established four-grade scoring method based on susceptibility-weighted imaging (SWI): grades 0–3 (grade 0 for no visible DMVs; grade 1 for the numbers of conspicuous DMVs p = 0.002), lower levels of admission systolic blood pressure (BP) (p = 0.031), and elevated rates of large infarction (p = 0.003). At three months, the severe DMVs group had higher mRS (p = 0.002). Patients in the poor outcome group (82/170, 48.2%) had older age, higher baseline NIHSS score, lower admission diastolic BP, higher rates of hemorrhagic transformation and large infarction, and an increased proportion of severe DMVs (all p p = 0.024) was significantly associated with three-month functional outcomes without interaction with other potential risk factors (p for interaction > 0.05). Conclusions: DMVs grade in the unaffected hemisphere was independently associated with three-month functional outcome in acute cardioembolic stroke patients. Patients with severe DMVs were more likely to have a poor functional outcome at three months.

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