Stroke Prevention Research Unit, Level 6 West Wing, John Radcliffe Hospital, Oxford OX3 9DU, UK.
Stroke. 2011 Nov;42(11):3116-21. doi: 10.1161/STROKEAHA.111.621490. Epub 2011 Sep 8.
Acute cognitive impairment and delirium occur after major stroke and are associated with poor cognitive outcome. We conducted a population-based study to determine whether transient cognitive impairment (TCI) is seen acutely after cerebral transient ischemic attack (TIA) or minor stroke, and whether it predicts long-term cognitive decline.
Mini-mental-state examination was performed in consecutive testable patients with TIA or minor stroke (National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale ≤3) seen acutely (1-7 days) in the Oxford Vascular Study (2002-2005) versus after 7 days, and in referrals seen acutely who had a subsequent noncerebrovascular diagnosis. We defined TCI as a baseline Mini-mental-state examination score ≥2 points below the 1-month follow-up score, and identified cognitive impairment (Montreal Cognitive Assessment [MoCA] <26/30) and severe dementia at 1-, 2-, and 5-year follow-up.
In 280 TIA and minor stroke patients (mean age/SD 73.5/11.8 years), TCI was more frequent in those seen at 1 to 7 days (80/206; 38.9%) versus later (14/74; 19%; P=0.002) or in noncerebrovascular patients (10/47; 21%; P=0.004). TCI was associated with acute confusion (OR, 5.5; 95% CI, 2.5-11.7; P<0.0001), acute infarct on computed tomography (OR, 2.0; 1.2-3.5; P=0.01), and with residual focal deficits (OR,1.94; 1.13-3.34; P=0.01). However, it was still seen acutely in those whose focal deficits had resolved by time of assessment (41/120; 34%). Although patients with TCI had similar Mini-mental-state examination score by 1 month compared with those without TCI, their 5-year risks of cognitive impairment (OR, 4.3; 1.2-15.7; P=0.03) and severe dementia (OR, 4.9; 1.0-25.8; P=0.05) were increased.
TCI is a manifestation of TIA and minor stroke, and may persist beyond resolution of focal symptoms. Our findings have implications for definitions in TIA and minor stroke and suggest that cognitive fragility may be revealed by minor cerebrovascular events.
急性认知障碍和谵妄发生在大卒中后,与认知预后不良有关。我们进行了一项基于人群的研究,以确定短暂性认知障碍(TCI)是否在大脑短暂性缺血发作(TIA)或小卒中后急性发作(1-7 天)中出现,以及是否预示着长期认知下降。
在牛津血管研究(2002-2005 年)中,对急性(1-7 天)和急性(7 天后)接受测试的 TIA 或小卒中(国家卫生研究院卒中量表≤3)患者进行了迷你精神状态检查,以及在随后出现非脑血管诊断的急性就诊患者中进行了检测。我们将 TCI 定义为基线迷你精神状态检查评分比 1 个月随访评分低 2 分以上,在 1、2 和 5 年随访时确定认知障碍(蒙特利尔认知评估[MoCA]<26/30)和严重痴呆。
在 280 例 TIA 和小卒中患者(平均年龄/标准差 73.5/11.8 岁)中,1-7 天内就诊的患者(80/206;38.9%)比后期就诊的患者(14/74;19%;P=0.002)或非脑血管患者(10/47;21%;P=0.004)更常出现 TCI。TCI 与急性意识混乱(OR,5.5;95%CI,2.5-11.7;P<0.0001)、计算机断层扫描上的急性梗死(OR,2.0;1.2-3.5;P=0.01)和残留的局灶性缺陷(OR,1.94;1.13-3.34;P=0.01)有关。然而,在评估时局灶性缺陷已解决的患者中,仍可出现 TCI(41/120;34%)。尽管 TCI 患者的简易精神状态检查评分在 1 个月时与无 TCI 患者相似,但他们在 5 年内认知障碍(OR,4.3;1.2-15.7;P=0.03)和严重痴呆(OR,4.9;1.0-25.8;P=0.05)的风险增加。
TCI 是 TIA 和小卒中的一种表现形式,可能在局灶性症状消退后持续存在。我们的研究结果对 TIA 和小卒中的定义具有影响,提示认知脆弱性可能因小脑血管事件而显现。