Transcript Slide 1
Childhood Stroke
Gita V. Massey, MD
Coagulation Update 2006
September 30, 2006
The challenge……………..
How to cover this
enormous topic in 30
minutes and give
some insightful advice
to the practicing
hematologist…………
…
What the experts say…….
Jordon, LC; Stroke in Childhood. The Neurologist; 12, 94-102; 2006
deVeber, G; In pursuit of evidence-based treatments for paediatric stroke.
The Lancet Neurology; 4, 432-436; 2005
Lynch, JK and Han CJ; Pediatric Stroke: What do we know and what do we
need to know? Sem in Neurology; 25,410-423; 2005
deVeber, G; Arterial ischemic strokes in infants and children: and overview
of current approaches; Sem in Thromb and Hemost; 29, 567-573; 2003.
Epidemiology
Incidence 8/100,000/year (1.3-13)
Incidence in neonates 1/4,000/year
Incidence increasing
– More sensitive imaging
– Effective Rx for predisposing condition (CHD,
prematurity, tumors)
Death in 6% (top 10 causes of death in children)
Neurologic deficits in 2/3
20-30% recurrence risk
Children are not little adults……
Incidence is rare
Subtle neurologic
presentation
Underdiagnosis and
delay in diagnosis
Multiple types of
stroke
Multiple risk factors
Type of Stroke
STROKE
Acute Ischemic Stroke
(AIS)
Hemorrhagic Stroke
(HS)
Cerebral Venous
Thrombosis (CVT)
Vascular malformations
Infection
ITP/Hemophilia
Dehydration
Brain tumors
Prothrombotic states
Acute Ischemic Stroke
Incidence is 3/100,000, year
Neonates account for 25% of AIS –
median age 5 yrs
Male predominance (60%)
Predominance in African-American
population
Clinical Features of AIS
Canadian Registry
– 51% hemiparesis
– 48% seizures
– 17% speech disorder
– 50% headache, lethargy, confusion
Neonates
– <25% hemiparesis
– Lethargy and seizures predominate
– No symptoms (early hand dominance)
Risk Factors for AIS
Vascular
AIS
Embolic
Intra-vascular
Vascular Risk Factors
Vascular
Arteriopathies
Transient
Vasospastic
Vasculitis
Systemic vascular
disease
Infectious
Progressive
Connective tissue disease
Drugs
Embolic Risk Factors
Embolic
Congenital
Heart Disease
Cyanotic Heart
Disease
Acquired Heart
Disease
Cardiomyopathy
PFO
Arrhythmia
Trauma
Intravascular Risk Factors
(The Hematologist’s Domain)
Intravascular
Hematologic
Disorders
Sickle cell
Prothrombotic
States
Acquired
Iron deficiency
Leukemia
Metabolic
Hyper
homocysteinemia
Congenital
Hyperlipidemia
The Acquired Prothrombotic States
Meds
Acquired
Lupus
Anticoagulants
Pregnancy
The Congenital Prothrombotic
States
ATIII
Lipoprotein
a
MTHFR
Protein C
Congenital
APC
resistance
Protein S
PT20210
Plasminogen
The Confusing Realm of
Prothrombotic States
How much do they
contribute?
Rare disorders
Age related
differences
Acute differences
Dietary variations
Inter-relations
Vascular
Embolic
Intravascular
The Diagnostic Work-Up
History
– Trauma, infection, palpitations, mental status
chages, underlying disease
– Previous DVT’s, family history
Physical Exam
– Marfanoid body habitus
– Cutaneous lesions
Café au lait spots
xanthoma
The Diagnostic Work-Up
Laboratory Studies
– CBC, comprehensive metabolic panel, ESR
– Toxicology and infectious studies
– The hypercoagulation studies
Imaging Studies
– CT
– MRI/MRA/MRV
– Echo
The hypercoagulation profile
Implicated in 38%-75% of childhood stroke
patients
Expensive
Rare disorders
Transient disorders
What can you do about it?
– B12, folate, B6 in hyperhomocystenemia
– Niacin in lipoprotein a
Therapy
Absence of RCT
Adapted from adults
Treat underlying risk factor
Prevent recurrence
Consensus on……
Sickle cell disease
Acute therapy
– Exchange transfusion
Preventive therapy
– Blood transfusion every 3-6 weeks to maintain
HbS<30%
– ?HU, stem cell transplant
– Transcranial dopplers
Current recommendations……
Neonatal AIS – no therapy
Dissecting vasculopathy – anticoagulation
3-6 months
Cardiogenic embolism – anticoagulation
but no consensus on length of time
Vasculopathy – ASA (no consensus on
dose 1-5mg/kg/day)
Recurrent stroke – consider
anticoagulation
Current practice…..
Most (>50%) will use LMWH/UH 5-7 days
in non neonatal period followed by ASA
Thrombolytic agents are rarely used in
pediatrics and their use is recommended
only in conjuction with clinical trials.
Outcomes of Childhood AIS
1991 – 85% long-term sequelae
2001 – 60% long-term sequelae
Hemiparesis, speech, learning and behavior
WORSE IF…..
–
–
–
–
–
Multiple risk factors
CHD/progressive vasculopathy
Larger infarct
Stroke after neonatal period
Seizures with stroke
What do we need for the future?
Prospective cohort
studies
– Standard evaluation of
risk and outcome
– Develop therapy and
prevention strategies
Incidence studies
Case control studies
of risk factors
Outcome studies