Intracranial hypertension (ICHT) is the most frequent presenting syndrome of dural vein sinus thrombosis (CVT). A transient ischemic attack as an acute mode of onset is exceptional.
A right handed, ...forty years old man with a medical history of recurrent headaches, microcephalia and calcifications in his brain, presenting to the emergency department with left paresis that lasted a few minutes and with a complete recovery. The cerebral and neck magnetic resonance (MR) including MR angiography showed superior sagittal sinus, both transverse sinuses and right sigmoid sinus thrombosis with an increase in size of superficial cerebral venous that drained to the left sigmoid sinus. There was no evidence of intracranial dural malformations. The cerebral MR did not show any abnormal parenchymal enhancement (edema, arterial or venous infarctions, hemorrhage) including diffusion-weighted IMR. The digital subtraction angiography (ADC) confirmed the same findings as the MR angiography. The diagnosis was a chronic CVT. We studied stroke in a young adult and we did not find other irregularities. The neurological examination was normal when the patient left the hospital with an antiplatelet drug.
Focal neurological deficit is an exceptional event of a chronic vein sinus thrombosis during follow-up. Isolated cases regarding an acute time course have been described. The interest of this case lies in the fact that venous sinus thrombosis rarely has transitory focal deficit in its course and we found no such description as onset symptoms.
The encephalopathies that may accompany Hashimoto's thyroiditis and scleromyxedema, both of which are diseases that probably have an autoimmune origin, are clinically similar. The presence of both ...Hashimoto's thyroiditis and scleromyxedema in a patient with encephalopathy led us to compare the clinical symptoms and the different possible mechanisms accounting for the pathology.
We describe the case of a 54-year-old male who was admitted to hospital because of several occurrences of transient neurological focus that finally developed into a clinical picture of aphasia, acalculia and right homonymous hemianopsia. The patient had previously been diagnosed as suffering from scleromyxedema, which responded poorly to treatment, as well as IgG kappa paraproteinemia and, six months before admission to hospital, Hashimoto's thyroiditis. No abnormalities were found in the complementary tests, except for slightly high protein levels in the cerebrospinal fluid, a diffuse slowing of brain waves in the electroencephalogram and alterations due to thyroiditis and paraproteinemia. Neurological symptoms improved after a few days of corticoid therapy.
The presentation of encephalopathy as a stroke and its excellent response to treatment with corticoids pointed to a case of Hashimoto's encephalopathy, although we cannot completely rule out the possibility of it being a dermato-neuro syndrome, which is associated to scleromyxedema. In this paper we review the different pathological mechanisms proposed for the two clinical entities, as well as the clinical features that are similar in both syndromes and which could be an indication of some common mechanism shared by them.
The presence of depression constitutes one of the treatable complications in stroke survivors. Its long term prevalence and the triggering factors are unknown in our community. Moreover, its presence ...can interfere in the process of rehabilitating the patient and in family dynamics.
A sample of 118 patients from the Stroke Unit at the Hospital Universitario San Carlos in Madrid were studied. After one year follow up, 90 survivors (41 females and 49 males; average age: 68 years) were evaluated, with their informed consent, with the Hamilton depression and Beck s melancholia scale, the Barthel index, the Rankin scale, Psychosocial Dimension of Sickness Impact Profile and the Scandinavian neurological scale. A factorial ANOVA model was used to conduct the statistical analysis.
On discharge, a third of the patients presented symptoms of depression, while a year after the stroke the figure had risen to 67%. The average score on the Hamilton scale at one year follow up was 13.1 and was rated as mild depression. The variables related with depression one year after the stroke were of a socio demographic nature (female, women working in the home, long lasting occupational disability; p< 0.0001), whereas biological variables (cortical/subcortical distribution, laterality, aetiology and subtype of the stroke) were not statistically significant. Subjects suffering from serious disabilities that affected the performance of their daily activities (Barthel< 60) scored significantly worse (p= 0.005). Motor deficit, according to the Scandinavian scale, was of no use as a predictor of depression one year after the stroke (p= 0.0617).
Post stroke depression is highly prevalent in our community and, late on in the follow up, is associated with socio demographic variables and with the degree of disability.
To assess the psychometric attributes of the stroke-adapted 30-item version of the Sickness Impact Profile, Spanish version (SA-SIP30), in stroke survivors.
79 patients were evaluated (mean age: 68.1 ...years) by means of the modified Rankin Scale (m-RS), Scandinavian Stroke Scale (SSS), Barthel Index (BI), and the modified 23-item Beck-Hamilton's Depression Rating Scale (HDRS). Health-related quality of life was evaluated using the MOS-Short Form 36 (SF-36) and the SA-SIP30.
SA-SIP30 mean score was 36.8. SA-SIP30 floor and ceiling effects were 3.8% and 0%. Regarding SA-SIP30 categories, floor effect ranged from 15.2% (social interaction) to 49.4% (alertness behavior), whereas ceiling effect ranged from 2.5% (social interaction) to 26.6% (household management). A floor effect was observed in seven SA-SIP30 categories. The internal consistency of SA-SIP30 (Cronbach's alpha = 0.87), physical (Cronbach's alpha = 0.89) and psychosocial (Cronbach's alpha = 0.75) dimensions were satisfactory. Standard error of measurement (SEM) values for each SA-SIP30 category ranged from 15.9 (household management) to 26.3 (ambulation). SEM values for overall SA-SIP30, physical and psychosocial dimensions were 8, 10 and 17.3, respectively. Corrected item-category correlations ranged from 0.17 (item 28) to 0.83 (item 23). A significant correlation (Spearman's correlation coefficient; p < 0.0001) between SA-SIP30 scores and BI (-0.71), m-RS (0.68), SSS (-0.67), HDRS (0.52), SF-36 physical (-0.67) and mental components (-0.51) was found. SA-SIP30 mean score significantly increased as m-RS increased (discriminative validity; Kruskal-Wallis, p < 0.0001).
The Spanish-version of the SA-SIP30 has satisfactory internal consistency, convergent validity and discriminative validity in stroke patients.
Lacunar infarcts (LI) are small deep infarcts due to occlusion of perforating branches.
Our objective was to outline the clinical and epidemiological characteristics which differentiate hemispherical ...lacunar infarcts (HLI) from those of the brain stem (SLI).
We present 110 cases of LI (80 HLI, 30 SLI) analysing risk factors, clinical syndromes, findings on neurological examination (dysarthria, gravity, distribution and proportional paresia), form of clinical presentation, evolution whilst in hospital, site and results of carotid duplex. Diagnosis was made in 72 patients using magnetic resonance (MR) and in 38 patients using computerized axial tomography (CT).
The commonest characteristics of SLI, as compared with HLI, with statistical significance (p < 0.05) was the appearance of supranuclear facial paresia (OR = 2.68), severe motor involvement (OR = 4.23), form of presentation with previous TIA (OR = 6.33), fluctuating evolution of the symptoms (OR = 5.78) and progression of the paresia (OR = 6.41). Also, in the pontine LI there was significant correlation between site and gravity: the lower the site of the lesion, the more serious was the paresia. Patients with multiple LI presented with no previous risk factors significantly more frequently than those with a single LI.
The different clinical profiles may help to establish the subgroups of IL, according to where they occur.
The paradoxical embolism or the crossing of an embolism through a permeable foramen ovale is considered to be a rare mechanism of cerebral embolism although its real frequency is unknown. Reports ...demonstrating the embolism during its crossing through cardiac cavities are scarce. Two cases of moving paradoxical embolism are presented. In the first, an infarction of the superior branch of the left middle cerebral artery was produced during the course of deep vein thrombosis and pulmonary thromboembolism with transesophageal echocardiography demonstrating the crossing of the embolism through the foramen ovale. Surgery performed 12 days later did not discover the auricular thrombus. In the second case, a mass was discovered in the right auricle with a permeable foramen ovale during the course of a left middle cerebral artery infarction and a large auricular thrombus was demonstrated in surgery. The diagnostic usefulness of early transsesophageal echocardiography in the diagnosis of moving paradoxal embolism is discussed.
Some studies of ischemic cardiopathy have shown that when pravastatin is used for the prevention of strokes, these are reduced. Whilst we await suitable clinical trials, we discuss the possible role ...played by these drugs in this subgroup of patients.
A panel of experts from different specialties assess the data published on dislipemias in the epidemiology of strokes, the possible effect of statins in the prevention of cerebral infarcts in patients with atheromatous stenosis of the carotid artery and their mode of action.
Pravastatin is indicated in all patients with ictus of atheromatous origin as primary prevention of ischemic cardiopathy, in patients with strokes and hypercholesterolemia, and in patients with symptomatic or asymptomatic carotid stenosis while we wait for more specific clinical trials.