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Etiologic Profile of Childhood Stroke from North India: Is It Different from Developed World?
Journal of Child Neurology ( IF 2.0 ) Pub Date : 2021-02-23 , DOI: 10.1177/0883073821991291
Abhinandan Sood 1 , Renu Suthar 1 , Jitendra K Sahu 1 , Arun K Baranwal 2 , Arushi G Saini 1 , Lokesh Saini 1 , Sameer Vyas 3 , Niranjan Khandelwal 3 , Naveen Sankhyan 1
Affiliation  

Objective:

To describe the etiology of childhood arterial-ischemic stroke from a developing country and assess short-term neurologic outcome.

Methods:

Prospective observational study. Consecutive children between the age of >28 days to <12 years, admitted with the diagnosis of arterial-ischemic stroke were enrolled during the study period from January 2017 to December 2018. Short-term neurologic outcome was assessed with Pediatric Cerebral Performance Category (PCPC) scale and Pediatric Stroke Outcome Measure (PSOM).

Results:

We enrolled 76 children with arterial-ischemic stroke, with a median age of 24 months (interquartile range 12-69), and 43 (57%) were boys. The most common risk factor for childhood arterial-ischemic stroke was arteriopathy in 59 (77%), followed by cardiovascular disorder in 12 (16%) children. Among 59 children with arteriopathy, 32 (42%) had infection-associated arteriopathies, 10 (13%) had mineralizing angiopathy, 10 (13%) had moyamoya disease. Pediatric stroke risk factors were classified according to Pediatric Stroke Classification and CASCADE primary classification. Short-term neurologic outcome was assessed at 3 months in 62 (82%) survivors. Among stroke survivors, 33 (61%) had sensory-motor deficits, and 24 (39%) had severe neurologic disability (PCPC ≥ 4). The presence of fever, encephalopathy, low Glasgow coma score at presentation, seizures, and infection-associated arteriopathy predicted severe neurologic disability at follow-up.

Conclusion:

The risk factors for pediatric arterial-ischemic stroke are different from developed countries in our cohort. Infection-associated arteriopathies, mineralizing angiopathy, and moyamoya disease are the most common risk factors in our cohort. Two-thirds of pediatric stroke survivors have neurologic disability at short-term follow-up.

更新日期:2021-02-24
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