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Published in: Clinical Research in Cardiology 5/2015

01-05-2015 | Original Paper

Silent ischemic brain lesions after transcatheter aortic valve replacement: lesion distribution and predictors

Authors: Mariam Samim, Jeroen Hendrikse, H. Bart van der Worp, Pierfrancesco Agostoni, Freek Nijhoff, Pieter A. Doevendans, Pieter R. Stella

Published in: Clinical Research in Cardiology | Issue 5/2015

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Abstract

Aims

Silent ischemic brain lesions and ischemic stroke are known complications of transcatheter aortic valve replacement (TAVR). We aimed to investigate the occurrence and distribution of TAVR-related silent ischemic brain lesions using diffusion-weighted magnetic resonance imaging (DWI).

Methods

Consecutive patients with severe aortic valve stenosis treated with TAVR underwent cerebral DWI within 5 days after the index procedure. DWI scans were analyzed for the occurrence and distribution of new ischemic lesions post-TAVR.

Results

Forty-two patients were enrolled in this study. After TAVR, a total of 276 new cerebral ischemic lesions were detected in 38 (90 %) patients, with a median of 4.5 (interquartile range 2.0–7.0) lesions per patient. A total of 129 (47 %) lesions were detected in the cortical regions, 97 (35 %) in the subcortical regions, and 50 (18 %) in the cerebellum or brainstem. The median lesion volume was 20.2 µl (10.0, 42.7) and the total ischemic lesion volume was 132.3 µl (42.8, 336.9). The new ischemic brain lesions were clinically silent in 37 (97 %) patients; the other patient had a transient ischemic attack. Age (B = 0.528, p = 0.015), hyperlipidaemia (B = 5.809, p = 0.028) and post-dilatation of the implanted prosthesis (B = 7.196, p = 0.029) were independently associated with the number of post-TAVR cerebral DWI lesions. In addition, peak transaortic gradient was independently associated with post-procedural total infarct volume.

Conclusion

Clinically silent cerebral infarcts occurred in 90 % of patients following TAVR, most of which were small (<20 μl) and located in the cortical regions of the cerebral hemispheres. An independent association was found between age, hyperlipidaemia and balloon post-dilatation and the number of post-TAVR ischemic brain lesions. Only peak transaortic gradient was independently associated with post-procedural total infarct volume.
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Metadata
Title
Silent ischemic brain lesions after transcatheter aortic valve replacement: lesion distribution and predictors
Authors
Mariam Samim
Jeroen Hendrikse
H. Bart van der Worp
Pierfrancesco Agostoni
Freek Nijhoff
Pieter A. Doevendans
Pieter R. Stella
Publication date
01-05-2015
Publisher
Springer Berlin Heidelberg
Published in
Clinical Research in Cardiology / Issue 5/2015
Print ISSN: 1861-0684
Electronic ISSN: 1861-0692
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00392-014-0798-8

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