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Abstract T P179: Atrial Fibrillation Unidentified Prior to Stroke/tia: Background Features, Stroke Severity and Outcome - The Samurai-nvaf Study

Authors :
kazunari honma
Kazunori Toyoda
Shunya Takizawa
Kenichi Todo
Kazumi Kimura
Yoshiaki Shiokawa
Kenji Kamiyama
Tadashi Terasaki
Yasushi Okada
Yoshinari Nagakane
Hiroshi Mochizuki
Yasuhiro Hasegawa
Satoshi Okuda
Eisuke Furui
Yasuhiro Ito
Takahiro Nakashima
Kazuomi Kario
Tomoaki Kameda
Kazuhiro Takamatsu
Kazutoshi Nishiyama
Shoji Arihiro
Hiroshi Yamagami
Junpei Kobayashi
Shoichiro Sato
Masatoshi Koga
Source :
Stroke. 45
Publication Year :
2014
Publisher :
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health), 2014.

Abstract

Purpose: Atrial fibrillation (AF) is often detected after embolic events occur, and it is an obstacle to effective preventive anticoagulation. We aimed to determine a percentage of patients with nonvalvular AF (NVAF) unidentified prior to stroke in the overall stroke patients with NVAF, as well as background features, stroke severity and outcome of such occult NVAF patients. Methods: A total of 743 acute ischemic stroke/TIA patients with NVAF (344 women, 78±10 years old) were enrolled between Sep 2011 and Jun 2013 from a multicenter prospective registry (the SAMURAI-NVAF study, NCT01581502). Patients were divided into two groups; those with identified AF before stroke/TIA (Group I) and those with unidentified AF that was documented at emergent visit or later (Group U). Favorable outcome was defined as mRS 0-2 at hospital discharge (for 710 patients, median 23 days) and at 3 months (for 565 patients). Results: 285 patients belonged to the Group U (38%; 138 women, 78±11 years old). Although both median CHADS 2 (2 vs. 2, p2 DS 2 -VASc (3 vs. 4, p2 and 91% according to CHA 2 DS 2 -VASc in the Group U. After multivariate adjustment, paroxysmal AF (OR 1.91, 95% CI 1.24-2.75) was more common and congestive heart failure (0.63, 0.40-0.99) and premorbid use of oral anticoagulants (0.08, 0.04-0.13) were less common in the Group U than the Group I. The median initial NIHSS was higher in the Group U (11 [IQR 4-19]) than in the Group I (6 [2-17], p Conclusion: Two fifth of the stroke/TIA patients with NVAF were not diagnosed as having AF prior to the attack, though their ischemia-risk indices were generally high. Patients with such occult NVAF had severer stroke and worse outcome than those with identified AF.

Details

ISSN :
15244628 and 00392499
Volume :
45
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Stroke
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........78d26cf6ece48a68d75c96a2ecdab0bd