Prabhakaran S, Wright C B, Yoshita M, Delapaz R, Brown T, DeCarli C, Sacco R L
Rush University Medical Center, Chicago, IL, USA.
Neurology. 2008 Feb 5;70(6):425-30. doi: 10.1212/01.wnl.0000277521.66947.e5. Epub 2007 Sep 26.
Risk factors for subclinical brain infarcts (SBI) have not been well studied, especially in Hispanic and black populations who may be at higher risk for vascular disease. We examined the prevalence and determinants of SBI in a multiethnic community cohort.
The Northern Manhattan Study (NOMAS) includes 892 stroke-free participants who underwent brain MRI. Baseline demographic and vascular risk factor data were collected. The presence of SBI was determined from the size, location, and imaging characteristics of the lesion based on fluid attenuated inversion recovery (FLAIR) T1 and T2, and proton density MRI sequences. We calculated the prevalence of SBI and cross-sectional associations with sociodemographic and vascular risk factors, using logistic regression to adjust for relevant covariates.
Among 892 subjects (mean age 71.3 years), 158 (17.7%) had SBI (13.5% had 1 lesion, 4.3% had >1 lesion). Of the total 216 infarcts, most were small (<1 cm, 82.4%) and subcortical (82.9%). SBI prevalence increased with age (<65: 9.7%; 65 to 75: 16.4%; >75: 26.1%), was increased among men (21.3% vs 15.2% in women), and was increased among blacks (24.0% vs 18.1% in whites and 15.8% in Hispanics). The presence of SBI was independently associated with older age (per year: OR 1.06, 95% CI 1.04 to 1.09), male sex (OR 1.79, 95% CI 1.22 to 2.61), and hypertension (OR 2.08, 95% CI 1.35 to 3.22) adjusting for age, sex, race-ethnicity, and vascular risk factors. A significant interaction (p = 0.002) between race and age was observed such that younger black subjects had greater odds of having SBI.
SBI were detected in nearly 18% of subjects in a multiethnic community-based cohort. Age, male sex, and hypertension were independently associated with SBI. Subclinical cerebral infarcts are more prevalent than symptomatic infarcts and may increase the true public health burden of stroke.
亚临床脑梗死(SBI)的危险因素尚未得到充分研究,尤其是在可能具有更高血管疾病风险的西班牙裔和黑人人群中。我们在一个多民族社区队列中研究了SBI的患病率及其决定因素。
北曼哈顿研究(NOMAS)纳入了892名未发生过中风的参与者,他们接受了脑部MRI检查。收集了基线人口统计学和血管危险因素数据。根据液体衰减反转恢复(FLAIR)T1和T2以及质子密度MRI序列,通过病变的大小、位置和成像特征来确定SBI的存在。我们计算了SBI的患病率以及与社会人口统计学和血管危险因素的横断面关联,并使用逻辑回归对相关协变量进行调整。
在892名受试者(平均年龄71.3岁)中,158人(17.7%)患有SBI(13.5%有1个病灶,4.3%有1个以上病灶)。在总共216个梗死灶中,大多数较小(<1 cm,82.4%)且位于皮质下(82.9%)。SBI患病率随年龄增加而升高(<65岁:9.7%;65至75岁:16.4%;>75岁:26.1%),男性患病率更高(男性为21.3%,女性为15.2%),黑人患病率也更高(黑人为24.0%,白人为18.1%,西班牙裔为15.8%)。在对年龄、性别、种族和血管危险因素进行调整后,SBI的存在与年龄较大(每年:OR 1.06,95%CI 1.04至1.09)、男性性别(OR 1.79,95%CI 1.22至2.61)和高血压(OR 2.08,95%CI 1.35至3.22)独立相关。观察到种族和年龄之间存在显著交互作用(p = 0.002),即年轻黑人受试者患SBI的几率更高。
在一个基于社区的多民族队列中,近18%的受试者检测到SBI。年龄、男性性别和高血压与SBI独立相关。亚临床脑梗死比有症状的梗死更普遍,可能会增加中风真正的公共卫生负担。