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Stroke of Other Determined Etiology: Results From the Nationwide Multicenter Stroke Registry

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Abstract
Background: Stroke of other determined etiology (OE) includes patients with an uncommon cause of stroke. We described the general characteristics, management, and outcomes of stroke in OE and its subgroups.

Methods: This study is a retrospective analysis of a prospective, multicenter, nationwide registry, the Clinical Research Center for Stroke-Korea-National Institutes of Health registry. We classified OE strokes into 10 subgroups according to the literature and their properties. Each OE subgroup was compared according to clinical characteristics, sex, age strata, lesion locations, and management. Moreover, 1-year composites of stroke and all-cause mortality were investigated according to the OE subgroups.

Results: In total, 2119 patients with ischemic stroke with OE types (mean age, 55.6±16.2 years; male, 58%) were analyzed. In the Clinical Research Center for Stroke-Korea-National Institutes of Health registry, patients with OE accounted for 2.8% of all patients with stroke. The most common subtypes were arterial dissection (39.1%), cancer-related coagulopathy (17.3%), and intrinsic diseases of the arterial wall (16.7%). Overall, strokes of OE were more common in men than in women (58% versus 42%). Arterial dissection, intrinsic diseases of the arterial wall and stroke associated with migraine and drugs were more likely to occur at a young age, while disorders of platelets and the hemostatic system, cancer-related coagulopathy, infectious diseases, and hypoperfusion syndromes were more frequent at an old age. The composite of stroke and all-cause mortality within 1 year most frequently occurred in cancer-related coagulopathy, with an event rate of 71.8%, but least frequently occurred in stroke associated with migraine and drugs and arterial dissection, with event rates of 0% and 7.2%, respectively.

Conclusions: This study presents the different characteristics, demographic findings, lesion locations, and outcomes of OE and its subtypes. It is characterized by a high proportion of arterial dissection, high mortality risk in cancer-related coagulopathy and an increasing annual frequency of cancer-related coagulopathy in patients with stroke of OE.
Author(s)
Hyunsoo KimJoon-Tae KimJi Sung LeeBeom Joon KimJihoon KangKeon-Joo LeeJong-Moo ParkKyusik KangSoo Joo LeeJae Guk KimJae-Kwan ChaDae-Hyun KimTai Hwan ParkKyung Bok LeeJun LeeKeun-Sik HongYong-Jin ChoHong-Kyun ParkByung-Chul LeeKyung-Ho YuMi Sun OhDong-Eog KimWi-Sun RyuJay Chol ChoiJee-Hyun KwonWook-Joo KimDong-Ick ShinKyu Sun YumSung Il SohnJeong-Ho HongSang-Hwa LeeMan-Seok ParkKang-Ho ChoiJuneyoung LeeHee-Joon Bae
Issued Date
2022
Type
Article
Keyword
demographydissectionhemostaticmigrainesyndrome
DOI
10.1161/STROKEAHA.121.037582
URI
https://oak.ulsan.ac.kr/handle/2021.oak/13728
Publisher
STROKE
Language
영어
ISSN
0039-2499
Citation Volume
53
Citation Number
8
Citation Start Page
2597
Citation End Page
2606
Appears in Collections:
Medicine > Nursing
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