Journal
JOURNAL OF INTERVENTIONAL CARDIOLOGY
Volume 23, Issue 3, Pages 284-290Publisher
WILEY-HINDAWI
DOI: 10.1111/j.1540-8183.2010.00557.x
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- Great Basin Research, Salt Lake City, Utah
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Methods: We performed diagnostic TCD on 445 consecutive patients with cryptogenic neurological disease (cerebral vascular accident, 21%; transient ischemic attack, 30%; migraine, 48%; and abnormal magnetic resonance brain imaging, 68%). Immediately following the procedure, patients were questioned about neurological symptoms. Results: One hundred and sixty-three (37%) of the 445 patients had absent or minimal shunting (Spencer grades 0-1) and 233 of 445 (52%) had severe RLS (Spencer grades 4-5+). One or more TCD-associated neurological symptoms (TCD-SX) developed in 95 of 445 (21%) of the patients. Compared to patients with absent or minimal shunting, patients with shunt grades 2-5+ were two and one half times more likely to develop TCD-SX (18/164 [11%] vs. 77/283 [27%], P < 0.001). TCD-SX were fourfold more common among patients with a history of migraine compared to history-negative subjects (35 vs. 8.7%, P < 0.0001). Conclusions: Diagnostic bubble-contrast TCD provoked transient neurological symptoms. The symptoms correlated with the severity of RLS and were more common in migraine patients, suggesting that migraine patients are sensitized to chemical and/or microembolic shunt factors. There was no significant residual morbidity, and bubble-contrast echocardiograph continues to be a safe and valuable diagnostic procedure. (J Interven Cardiol 2010;23:284-290).
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