Author(s):
Machado, V ; Pimentel, S ; Pinto, F ; Nona, J
Date: 2015
Persistent ID: http://hdl.handle.net/10400.17/2217
Origin: Repositório do Centro Hospitalar de Lisboa Central, EPE
Subject(s): MAC PED; Brain Ischemia/diagnosis; Age Factors; Risk Factors; Brain Ischemia/epidemiology; Retrospective Studies; Brain Ischemia/etiology; Brazil/epidemiology; Echoencephalography; Electroencephalography; Follow-Up Studies; Infant, Newborn; Magnetic Resonance Imaging; Stroke/diagnosis; Stroke/epidemiology; Stroke/etiology; Time Factors
Description
Objective To study the incidence, clinical presentation, risk factors, imaging diagnosis, and clinical outcome of perinatal stroke. Methods Data was retrospectively collected from full-term newborns admitted to the neonatal unit of a level III maternity in Lisbon with cerebral stroke, from January 2007 to December 2011. Results There were 11 cases of stroke: nine were arterial ischemic stroke and two were cerebral venous sinus thrombosis. We estimated an incidence of arterial ischemic stroke of 1.6/5,000 births and of cerebral venous sinus thrombosis of 7.2/100,000 births. There were two cases of recurrent stroke. Eight patients presented with symptoms while the remaining three were asymptomatic and incidentally diagnosed. The most frequently registered symptoms (8/11) were seizures; in that, generalized clonic (3/8) and focal clonic (5/8). Strokes were more commonly left-sided (9/11), and the most affected artery was the left middle cerebral artery (8/11). Transfontanelle ultrasound was positive in most of the patients (10/11), and stroke was confirmed by cerebral magnetic resonance in all patients. Electroencephalographic recordings were carried out in five patients and were abnormal in three (focal abnormalities n=2, burst-suppression pattern n=1). Eight patients had previously identified risk factors for neonatal stroke which included obstetric and neonatal causes. Ten patients were followed up at outpatients setting; four patients developed motor deficits and one presented with epilepsy. Conclusions Although a modest and heterogeneous sample, this study emphasizes the need for a high level of suspicion when it comes to neonatal stroke, primarily in the presence of risk factors. The prevalence of neurological sequelae in our series supports the need of long-term follow-up and early intervention strategies.