Decrease in shunt volume in patients with cryptogenic stroke and patent foramen ovale

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Abstract

Background: In patients with patent foramen ovale (PFO) there is evidence supporting the hypothesis of a change in right-to-left shunt (RLS) over time. Proven, this could have implications for the care of patients with PFO and a history of stroke. The following study addressed this hypothesis in a cohort of patients with stroke and PFO.Methods: The RLS volume assessed during hospitalisation for stroke (index event/T0) was compared with the RLS volume on follow-up (T1) (median time between T0 and T1 was 10 months). In 102 patients with a history of stroke and PFO the RLS volume was re-assessed on follow-up using contrast-enhanced transcranial Doppler/duplex (ce-TCD) ultrasound. A change in RLS volume was defined as a difference of ≥20 microembolic signals (MES) or no evidence of RLS during ce-TCD ultrasound on follow-up.Results: There was evidence of a marked reduction in RLS volume in 31/102 patients; in 14/31 patients a PFO was no longer detectable. An index event classified as cryptogenic stroke (P < 0.001; OD = 39.2, 95% confidence interval 6.0 to 258.2) and the time interval to the follow-up visit (P = 0.03) were independently associated with a change in RLS volume over time.Conclusions: RLS volume across a PFO decreases over time, especially in patients with cryptogenic stroke. These may determine the development of new strategies for the management in the secondary stroke prevention. © 2010 Tanislav et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd.

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Tanislav, C., Kaps, M., Jauss, M., Stolz, E., Pabst, W., Nedelmann, M., … Allendoerfer, J. (2010). Decrease in shunt volume in patients with cryptogenic stroke and patent foramen ovale. BMC Neurology, 10. https://doi.org/10.1186/1471-2377-10-123

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