INVESTIGATION OF AN EMBOLIC CEREBROVASCULAR ACCIDENT - THE CONTRIBUTION OF TRANSESOPHAGEAL ECHOGRAPHY
ANNALES DE CARDIOLOGIE ET D ANGEIOLOGIE(1993)
Abstract
Ischemic cerebrovascular accidents are classically attributed to an embolism of cardiac origin in 15 % of cases. This longstanding concept is questioned by trans-esophageal echocardiography (TEE). The incidence of anomalies which could be the origin of a cerebral embolism involves more than 50 % of cases in certain series. The superiority of TEE over trans-thoracic echocardiography (TTE) emerges in particular when certain abnormalities such as an intra-atrial thrombus, spontaneous atrial contrast, an intra-aortic atherosclerotic plaque, a patent foramen ovale or an aneurysm of the inter-atrial septum are sought. The high incidence of such abnormalities in a population having sustained an ischemic cerebrovascular accident is not sufficient to establish a cause-and-effect relationship between the abnormality and the cerebral event. Certain abnormalities are commonly associated with each other or with emboligenic arrhythmias (atrial fibrillation). Studies hence remain required to determine the respective responsibilities of these various abnormalities and stratify their embolic risk by defining certain risk factors. While awaiting the result of such studies, it would seem valid to suggest the more routine use of TEE in the investigation of ischemic cerebrovascular accidents in young patients free of clinically obvious heart disease, and this regardless of the result of TTE.
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