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Silent cerebral infarction in the patients with essential hypertension]
Authors:H Hougaku  M Matsumoto  K Kitagawa  K Harada  N Oku  T Itoh  H Maeda  N Handa  K Kimura  T Kamada
Institution:First Department of Internal Medicine, Osaka University Medical School.
Abstract:Evidence of old cerebral infarction of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) is common in acute stroke patients without a prior history of stroke. This experience led us to investigate the incidence of silent cerebral infarction (SCI) in the patients with essential hypertension, as well-known major predisposing factor for stroke. The incidence, number, size and localization of SCI on MRI (MARK-J, 0.1 T) and the prevalence of risk factors for stroke were investigated both in 66 hypertensive patients (WHO stage I or II; 63 +/- 9 (mean +/- S.D.) years old) and in 42 age-matched normotensive patients (61 +/- 9 years old). Risk factors selected were as follows: diabetes mellitus, hypercholesterolemia, daily alcohol intake, cigarette smoking, obesity, cardiac disease (arrhythmia and ischemic heart disease), hyperuricemia and high hematocrit. In hypertensive patients, the relationships between the incidence of SCI and hypertensive damages in major organs were also investigated. SCI was found in 45 out of the 108 subjects studied and a total of 216 SCI lesions were detected. All of the SCI lesions were localized in the subcortical white matter or in the basal ganglia. All SCI lesions were smaller than 3 cm in diameter and 201 lesions (93%) were smaller than 1 cm. The incidence of SCI tended to be higher in hypertensive patients (47%) than that in normotensives (33%) and increased significantly with advancing age in hypertensives from 26.9% in the 50s to 86.7% in the 70s, while no significant increase was noted in normotensives.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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