J Korean Neurol Assoc.
1998 Aug;16(4):444-449.
Stroke as a Late Complication in Patients with Cardiac Prosthetic Valves
- Affiliations
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- 1Department of Neurology, Keimyung University School of Medicine.
Abstract
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BACKGROUND: Information on the long-term fate of patients with prosthetic valve is limited. Cerebral embolism is a major cause of late morbidity and mortality in patients with prosthetic valves even though recent prostheses are less thrombogenic and anticoagulants are administered. We investigated the long-term risk of the first ischemic and hemorrhagic stroke and effect of presumed risk factors on the development of stroke in patients with prosthetic valves.
METHODS
In a retrospective study, 554 patients who survived the 30-days after cardiac valve replacement between June, 1985 and May, 1995 were included. End points were attacks of ischemic and hemorrhagic stroke. Risk of stroke at end points was calculated according to Kaplan-Meier method. The influence of several clinical variables on these stroke events was analyzed by univariate and mutivariate analyses.
RESULTS
Thirty seven of 554 patients had 42 stroke events(34 ischemic stroke, 8 hemorrhagic stroke) during follow-up periods(mean: 52.9months). Six of these patients died from stroke. The cumulative stroke-free probability was 92.4% at 5years and 87.7% at 10years. The cumulative ischemic stroke-free probability was 93.7% at 5years and 89.4% at 10years. No or irregular use of anticoagulants was the only significant independent predictor(RR:4.99, 95%CI:2.01-12.41, p<0.01) of ischemic stroke. The cumulative hemorrhagic stroke-free probability was 98.7% at 5years and 98.1% at 10years.
CONCLUSION
Regardless of the type of prostheses, patients with prosthetic valves, notably those without anticoagulants, are at high risk for ischemic stroke.