Abstract P674: Markers of Atherosclerotic Disease but Not Small Vessel Disease Predict Neurologic Deterioration in Acute Lacunar Strokes
Yang, D; Cutting, SM; Raz, E; Torres, JL; Mac Grory, BC; Scher, E; Pirooz, S; De Havenon, AH; Ishida, K; Furie, KL; Gutierrez, J; Elkind, MS; Yaghi, S
Published in: Stroke
Neurologic deterioration (ND) occurs in a quarter of acute lacunar infarct patients and may lead to severe disability. The underlying pathophysiology of ND in these patients is not clearly understood. We sought to identify risk factors and clinical characteristics associated with ND.
This retrospective study included consecutive patients admitted to NYU Langone Medical Center and Brown University for lacunar-type strokes from 2017-2019. Lacunar infarct was defined as subcortical infarct <1.5cm on CT or <2cm on diffusion-weighted imaging without significant stenosis (>50%) in the parent vessel and no cardioembolic source. Available non-invasive imaging (CTA or MRA) was reviewed by a neuroradiologist or vascular neurologist to determine the presence or absence of stenosis (<50%) or luminal irregularity without stenosis in the stem artery segment at the location of the perforator corresponding to the infarct. Fazekas score was determined from available MRI T2 images. We defined ND as those with any neurologic deterioration during their hospitalization referable to lacunar stroke and not related to a medical or non-cerebrovascular neurological complication. We compared clinical and radiographic characteristics of those with and without ND.
Among 242 lacunar stroke patients (mean age 68.9±12.2 years, 43.8% women, 61.2% white, 12.8% black, and 13.2% Hispanic), we identified 46 (19%) with ND. There were no demographic differences between those with and without ND. Those with ND were more likely to have systemic atherosclerotic disease (34.8% vs 19.9%, p=0.049) and higher low-density lipoprotein (111 vs 100 mg/dL, p=0.034). Those with ND had less white matter disease on MRI (lower Fazekas score) and were less likely to have chronic lacunes than those without ND. We did not find any association between radiographic subclinical perforator atherosclerotic disease and ND (odds ratio [95% confidence interval]: 1.83 [0.81-4.14], p=0.147).
In this multi-ethnic population, patients with neurologic deterioration following an acute lacunar stroke were more likely to have markers of atherosclerotic disease and less likely to have imaging findings suggestive of chronic small vessel disease.