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Title

Where in the Brain do Strokes Occur? A Pilot Study and Call for Data.

Authors

Nichols, Larry; Bridgewater, Joshua C.; Wagner, Nicholas B.; Karivelil, Mathew; Koelmeyer, Himara; Goings, Denise; Hope, Thomas D.

Abstract

Background: Every year, more than 795,000 people in the United States have a stroke, and each year about 140,000 Americans die from strokes. Although there is abundant information on the epidemiology, risk factors, pathophysiology, and many clinical features of strokes, there is a lack of specific numerical quantitation on the neuroanatomical distribution of strokes. Methods: This retrospective study utilized de-identified reports of radiologic imaging to determine the neurovascular anatomical location of acute ischemic cerebral infarcts in a 637-bed regional hospital in a rural area during the one-year interval from October 1, 2018 through September 30, 2019. Results: During the one-year study period, there were 418 acute ischemic strokes, and 54.6% (228/418) were in the territory of a single large vessel. Of the single large vessel strokes, 62.3% (142/228) were in a middle cerebral artery (MCA) territory, 12.1% (29/228) in a posterior cerebral artery (PCA) territory, 8.8% (20/228) in a basilar artery distribution, 7.5% (17/228) in a posterior inferior cerebellar artery (PICA) distribution, 6.6% (15/228) in an anterior cerebral artery (ACA) distribution, 1.8% (4/228) in a superior cerebellar artery (SCA) distribution, and 0.4% (1/228) in an anterior inferior cerebellar artery (AICA) territory. Internal capsule lacunar strokes accounted for 17.7% (74/418) of the total, brainstem lacunar strokes for 8.1% (34/418) and thalamic lacunar strokes for 5% (21/418) of the infarctions. Watershed infarctions accounted for 2.9% (12/418) of the strokes, 9 in the MCA/PCA watershed area and 3 in the MCA/ACA watershed area. Conclusions: This pilot study illustrates a methodology for collecting data to substitute specific numerical quantitation for vague generalities about the neuroanatomical distribution of strokes. Such quantification can enable evidence-based data-driven improvements in the care of stroke patients.

Subjects

STROKE diagnosis; BRAIN anatomy; PILOT projects; RURAL hospitals; STROKE; BRAIN diseases; CEREBRAL infarction; RETROSPECTIVE studies; DATA analytics; NEURORADIOLOGY

Publication

Clinical Medicine & Research, 2021, Vol 19, Issue 3, p110

ISSN

1539-4182

Publication type

Academic Journal

DOI

10.3121/cmr.2021.1632

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