Abbott Anne L, Silvestrini Mauro, Topakian Raffi, Golledge Jonathan, Brunser Alejandro M, de Borst Gert J, Harbaugh Robert E, Doubal Fergus N, Rundek Tatjana, Thapar Ankur, Davies Alun H, Kam Anthony, Wardlaw Joanna M
Department of Epidemiology and Preventive Medicine, School of Public Health and Preventive Medicine, Monash University, Melbourne, VIC, Australia.
The Neurology Department, The Alfred Hospital, Melbourne, VIC, Australia.
Front Neurol. 2017 Oct 18;8:537. doi: 10.3389/fneur.2017.00537. eCollection 2017.
Until now, stroke and transient ischemic attack (TIA) have been clinically based terms which describe the presence and duration of characteristic neurological deficits attributable to intrinsic disorders of particular arteries supplying the brain, retina, or (sometimes) the spinal cord. Further, infarction has been pathologically defined as death of neural tissue due to reduced blood supply. Recently, it has been proposed we shift to definitions of stroke and TIA determined by neuroimaging results alone and that neuroimaging findings be equated with infarction.
We examined the scientific validity and clinical implications of these proposals using the existing published literature and our own experience in research and clinical practice.
We found that the proposals to change to imaging-dominant definitions, as published, are ambiguous and inconsistent. Therefore, they cannot provide the standardization required in research or its application in clinical practice. Further, we found that the proposals are scientifically incorrect because neuroimaging findings do not always correlate with the clinical status or the presence of infarction. In addition, we found that attempts to use the proposals are disrupting research, are otherwise clinically unhelpful and do not solve the problems they were proposed to solve.
We advise that the proposals must not be accepted. In particular, we explain why the clinical focus of the definitions of stroke and TIA should be retained with continued sub-classification of these syndromes depending neuroimaging results (with or without other information) and that infarction should remain a pathological term. We outline ways the established clinically based definitions of stroke and TIA, and use of them, may be improved to encourage better patient outcomes in the modern era.
迄今为止,中风和短暂性脑缺血发作(TIA)一直是以临床为基础的术语,用于描述归因于供应脑、视网膜或(有时)脊髓的特定动脉内在疾病的特征性神经功能缺损的存在和持续时间。此外,梗死在病理学上被定义为由于血液供应减少导致的神经组织死亡。最近,有人提议我们转向仅由神经影像学结果确定的中风和TIA定义,并将神经影像学结果等同于梗死。
我们利用现有的已发表文献以及我们在研究和临床实践中的经验,研究了这些提议的科学有效性和临床意义。
我们发现,已发表的转向以影像学为主导定义的提议含糊不清且不一致。因此,它们无法提供研究所需的标准化或其在临床实践中的应用。此外,我们发现这些提议在科学上是不正确的,因为神经影像学结果并不总是与临床状况或梗死的存在相关。另外,我们发现尝试使用这些提议正在扰乱研究,在临床上并无帮助,也无法解决提出这些提议想要解决的问题。
我们建议不应接受这些提议。特别是,我们解释了为什么中风和TIA定义的临床重点应予以保留,并根据神经影像学结果(有无其他信息)继续对这些综合征进行亚分类,而且梗死应仍然是一个病理学术语。我们概述了可以改进已确立的基于临床的中风和TIA定义及其使用方法,以在现代鼓励更好的患者预后。