From the Department of Neurology (A.S.S.T., J.C.K., J.H.P., D.N.), University of Illinois College of Medicine at Peoria; and Departments of Neurology (G.M., D.F.H., D.S.Z., D.E.N.-T.) and Radiology (A.B., S.Y.), Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD.
Neurology. 2014 Jul 8;83(2):169-73. doi: 10.1212/WNL.0000000000000573. Epub 2014 Jun 11.
Describe characteristics of small strokes causing acute vestibular syndrome (AVS).
Ambispective cross-sectional study of patients with AVS (acute vertigo or dizziness, nystagmus, nausea/vomiting, head-motion intolerance, unsteady gait) with at least one stroke risk factor from 1999 to 2011 at a single stroke referral center. Patients underwent nonquantitative HINTS "plus" examination (head impulse, nystagmus, test-of-skew plus hearing), neuroimaging to confirm diagnoses (97% by MRI), and repeat MRI in those with initially normal imaging but clinical signs of a central lesion. We identified patients with diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI) strokes ≤10 mm in axial diameter.
Of 190 high-risk AVS presentations (105 strokes), we found small strokes in 15 patients (median age 64 years, range 41-85). The most common vestibular structure infarcted was the inferior cerebellar peduncle (73%); the most common stroke location was the lateral medulla (60%). Focal neurologic signs were present in only 27%. The HINTS "plus" battery identified small strokes with greater sensitivity than early MRI-DWI (100% vs 47%, p < 0.001). False-negative initial MRIs (6-48 hours) were more common with small strokes than large strokes (53% [n = 8/15] vs 7.8% [n = 7/90], p < 0.001). Nonlacunar stroke mechanisms were responsible in 47%, including 6 vertebral artery occlusions or dissections.
Small strokes affecting central vestibular projections can present with isolated AVS. The HINTS "plus" hearing battery identifies these patients with greater accuracy than early MRI-DWI, which is falsely negative in half, up to 48 hours after onset. We found nonlacunar mechanisms in half, suggesting greater risk than might otherwise be assumed for patients with such small infarctions.
描述引起急性前庭综合征(AVS)的小卒中的特征。
对 1999 年至 2011 年期间在一家卒中转诊中心就诊的至少有一个卒中危险因素的 AVS(急性眩晕或头晕、眼球震颤、恶心/呕吐、头部运动不耐受、步态不稳)患者进行前瞻性的横断面研究。患者接受非定量 HINTS“加”检查(头脉冲、眼球震颤、偏斜试验加听力)、神经影像学以确认诊断(97%通过 MRI),并对那些最初影像学正常但有中央病变临床体征的患者进行重复 MRI。我们确定了轴向直径≤10mm 的弥散加权成像(DWI)卒中患者。
在 190 例高危 AVS 表现(105 例卒中)中,我们发现 15 例患者有小卒中(中位年龄 64 岁,范围 41-85 岁)。最常见的受累前庭结构是小脑下脚(73%);最常见的卒中部位是外侧延髓(60%)。仅有 27%的患者出现局灶性神经体征。HINTS“加”电池检测小卒中的敏感性高于早期 MRI-DWI(100%比 47%,p<0.001)。小卒中的初始 MRI 假阴性(6-48 小时)比大卒中更常见(53%[n=15/8]比 7.8%[n=90/7],p<0.001)。47%的非腔隙性卒中机制,包括 6 例椎动脉闭塞或夹层。
影响中枢前庭投射的小卒中可引起孤立性 AVS。HINTS“加”听力电池比早期 MRI-DWI 更准确地识别这些患者,后者在发病后 48 小时内有一半为假阴性。我们发现一半为非腔隙性机制,表明这些小梗死患者的风险高于预期。