Hemispheric differences in ischemic stroke: is left-hemisphere stroke more common?
Document Type
Article
Abstract
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Understanding the mechanisms underlying stroke can aid the development of therapies and improve the final outcome. The purposes of this study were to establish whether there are characteristic mechanistic differences in the frequency, severity, functional outcome, and mortality between left- and right-hemisphere ischemic stroke and, given the velocity differences in the carotid circulation and direct branching of the left common carotid artery from the aorta, whether large-vessel ischemia (including cardioembolism) is more common in the territory of the left middle cerebral artery. METHODS: Trial cohorts were combined into a data set of 476 samples. Using Trial of Org 10172 in Acute Stroke Treatment criteria, ischemic strokes in a total 317 patients were included in the analysis. Hemorrhagic stroke, stroke of undetermined etiology, cryptogenic stroke, and bilateral ischemic strokes were excluded. Laterality and vascular distribution were correlated with outcomes using a logistic regression model. The etiologies of the large-vessel strokes were atherosclerosis and cardioembolism. RESULTS: The overall event frequency, mortality, National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale (NIHSS) score, Glasgow Coma Scale score, and rate of mechanical thrombectomy interventions differed significantly between the hemispheres. Left-hemispheric strokes (54%) were more common than right-hemispheric strokes (46%; p=0.0073), and had higher admission NIHSS scores (p=0.011), increased mortality (p=0.0339), and higher endovascular intervention rates (p≤0.0001). ischemic strokes were more frequent in the distribution of the left middle cerebral artery (122 vs. 97; p=0.0003) due to the higher incidence of large-vessel ischemic stroke in this area (p=0.0011). CONCLUSIONS: Left-hemispheric ischemic strokes appear to be more frequent and often have a worse outcome than their right-hemispheric counterparts. The incidence of large-vessel ischemic strokes is higher in the left middle cerebral artery distribution, contributing to these hemispheric differences. The hemispheric differences exhibit a nonsignificant trend when strokes in the middle cerebral artery distribution are excluded from the analysis.
Keywords
acute stroke, collaterals, endovascular intervention, endovascular treatment, ischemic stroke, mechanical thrombectomy, mortality after stroke, motor grade, outcome after stroke
Publication Date
4-1-2013
Publication Title
Journal of clinical neurology (Seoul, Korea)
ISSN
1738-6586
Volume
9
Issue
2
First Page
97
Last Page
102
PubMed ID
23626647
Digital Object Identifier (DOI)
10.3988/jcn.2013.9.2.97
Recommended Citation
Hedna, Vishnumurthy Shushrutha; Bodhit, Aakash N.; Ansari, Saeed; Falchook, Adam D.; Stead, Latha; Heilman, Kenneth M.; and Waters, Michael F., "Hemispheric differences in ischemic stroke: is left-hemisphere stroke more common?" (2013). Translational Neuroscience. 1321.
https://scholar.barrowneuro.org/neurobiology/1321