Back to Search Start Over

Stroke After Aortic Valve Surgery

Authors :
C. William Hanson
Thomas F. Floyd
Jeremy D. Kukafka
A. Pochettino
Y. Joseph Woo
William H. Matthai
W. Clark Hargrove
Joseph E. Bavaria
Stuart J. Weiss
Michael A. Acker
Molly Fanning
Michel Bilello
Ola A. Selnes
Steven R. Messé
Jiri Horak
Wilson Y. Szeto
Emile R. Mohler
Bonnie L. Milas
John G. Augostides
Catherine C. Price
Albert T. Cheung
Tania Giovanetti
Nimesh D. Desai
William J. Vernick
Tania Giovannetti
Rohinton J. Morris
Sarah J. Ratcliffe
Thomas A. Mickler
Scott E. Kasner
Warren J. Levy
Benjamin A. Kohl
Joseph S. Savino
Source :
Circulation. 129:2253-2261
Publication Year :
2014
Publisher :
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health), 2014.

Abstract

Background— The incidence and impact of clinical stroke and silent radiographic cerebral infarction complicating open surgical aortic valve replacement (AVR) are poorly characterized. Methods and Results— We performed a prospective cohort study of subjects ≥65 years of age who were undergoing AVR for calcific aortic stenosis. Subjects were evaluated by neurologists preoperatively and postoperatively and underwent postoperative magnetic resonance imaging. Over a 4-year period, 196 subjects were enrolled at 2 sites (mean age, 75.8±6.2 years; 36% women; 6% nonwhite). Clinical strokes were detected in 17%, transient ischemic attack in 2%, and in-hospital mortality was 5%. The frequency of stroke in the Society for Thoracic Surgery database in this cohort was 7%. Most strokes were mild; the median National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale was 3 (interquartile range, 1–9). Clinical stroke was associated with increased length of stay (median, 12 versus 10 days; P =0.02). Moderate or severe stroke (National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale ≥10) occurred in 8 (4%) and was strongly associated with in-hospital mortality (38% versus 4%; P =0.005). Of the 109 stroke-free subjects with postoperative magnetic resonance imaging, silent infarct was identified in 59 (54%). Silent infarct was not associated with in-hospital mortality or increased length of stay. Conclusions— Clinical stroke after AVR was more common than reported previously, more than double for this same cohort in the Society for Thoracic Surgery database, and silent cerebral infarctions were detected in more than half of the patients undergoing AVR. Clinical stroke complicating AVR is associated with increased length of stay and mortality.

Details

ISSN :
15244539 and 00097322
Volume :
129
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Circulation
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....17dd94d1f826be83c29ed93ab8b5525d
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1161/circulationaha.113.005084