DIFFERENCES IN CLINICAL-FEATURES AND COMPUTED TOMOGRAPHIC FINDINGS BETWEEN EMBOLIC AND NON-EMBOLIC ACUTE ISCHEMIC STROKE - A QUANTITATIVE DIFFERENTIAL-DIAGNOSIS
K. Takano et al., DIFFERENCES IN CLINICAL-FEATURES AND COMPUTED TOMOGRAPHIC FINDINGS BETWEEN EMBOLIC AND NON-EMBOLIC ACUTE ISCHEMIC STROKE - A QUANTITATIVE DIFFERENTIAL-DIAGNOSIS, Internal medicine, 37(2), 1998, pp. 141-148
A diagnosis based on the presumed mechanism of stroke onset is useful
for management strategies in acute ischemic stroke, Ninety-two patient
s with embolic (cardiac or artery-to-artery) and 107 with non-embolic
(thrombotic or hemodynamic) stroke were diagnosed on strict cerebral a
ngiographic criteria alone, To clearly discriminate between these two
groups, the neurological and computed tomographic (CT) findings were t
hen compared, Rapidity of onset, vomiting, urinary incontinence, level
of consciousness, cervical bruit, anisocoria, tongue deviation, senso
ry disturbance, and CT findings (location of hypodense area, findings
of brain edema and hemorrhagic transformation) were discriminatory fac
tors between the two groups (p<0.01), According to these 11 items, we
prepared a numerical table for quantitative differential diagnosis, A
diagnostic accuracy of 98.9% for embolic and 87.9% for non-embolic str
oke in internal verification, and 90.0% and 82.9%, respectively, in ex
ternal verification was observed, The differences in clinical features
and CT findings between embolic and non-embolic stroke may reflect th
e pathophysiological mechanisms of the occlusive process of cerebral a
rtery as well as the extent and severity of ischemia.