The impact of prior antithrombotic status on cerebral infarction in patients with atrial fibrillation

Bum Joon Kim, Hyo Jin Kim, Youngrok Do, Ju Hun Lee, Kwang Yeol Park, Jae Kwan Cha, Hahn Young Kim, Jee Hyun Kwon, Kyung Bok Lee, Dong Eog Kim, Sang Won Ha, Sung Il Sohn, Sun U. Kwon

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

16 Scopus citations

Abstract

Background Anticoagulation effectively prevents cardioembolic stroke in atrial fibrillation (AF) patients, whereas it is less effective than antiplatelet therapy (AT) in noncardioembolic stroke prevention. We hypothesized that the ischemic lesion pattern and vascular patency would differ according to the antithrombotic treatment status in AF patients.

Methods The medical records of 1078 acute ischemic stroke patients with AF were retrospectively reviewed. Patients were classified according to medication at stroke onset: (1) optimal anticoagulation (OAC; international normalized ratio [INR] 1.7-3.0; n = 36); (2) suboptimal anticoagulation (SOAC; INR ≤ n = 134); (3) AT (n = 285); and (4) control (no antithrombotic medication; n = 623). Imaging and clinical variables of each group were compared with that of controls.

Results Small cortical or single subcortical infarctions were more common in the OAC group than in controls (6% vs. 1% and 22% vs. 8%, respectively; standardized residual, 2.4 and 2.8). Multicirculatory infarctions were less common in the OAC group than in controls (0% vs. 11%; standardized residual, -2.0). Obstruction of the corresponding artery was less common in the OAC group than in controls (26.5% vs. 46.5%, P =.02). Initial neurologic severity was lower in the OAC and AT groups than in controls (P =.01 and.03, respectively). OAC and AT were independently associated with favorable functional outcome at 3-months (P =.015 and <.001, respectively).

Conclusions Ischemic stroke can occur during OAC in AF patients. Small cortical or single subcortical lesions were more common than typical cardioembolic lesion patterns. OAC and AT were protective against severe neurologic deficit and independently associated with favorable outcome, but SOAC was not.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)2054-2059
Number of pages6
JournalJournal of Stroke and Cerebrovascular Diseases
Volume23
Issue number8
DOIs
StatePublished - 1 Sep 2014

Keywords

  • Anticoagulation
  • atrial fibrillation
  • prognosis
  • stroke mechanism

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