C. Stollberger et al., EMBOLIC STROKE AND TRANSESOPHAGEAL ECHOCARDIOGRAPHY - CAN CLINICAL-PARAMETERS PREDICT THE DIAGNOSTIC YIELD, Journal of neurology, 242(7), 1995, pp. 437-442
The study was performed to determine whether age, cardiovascular risk
factors or the stroke syndrome might define patients with embolic stro
ke for whom transoesophageal echocardiography (TEE) would prove to be
useful. Of 256 patients from the Klosterneuburg Stroke Data Bank, 105
(40%) were included because of suspected embolic stroke (59 female, 46
male, mean age 64 years). A positive TEE finding was defined as the p
resence of left heart thrombus, valvular vegetation, right to left shu
nting or spontaneous echo contrast. TEE detected potential sources for
embolism in 35 of the 105 patients. These were left atrial/appendage
thrombi (n = 18), valvular vegetations (n = 4), right to left shunting
(n = 10), and spontaneous echo contrast (n = 5). Only the presence of
atrial fibrillation showed a significant association with the presenc
e of a cardiac source of embolism (18/35 versus 22/70, P < 0.02). Age,
cardiac disease, cardiovascular risk factors and the stroke syndrome
did not help in distinguishing stroke patients with and without a posi
tive TEE finding.