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Cerebral microbleeds — prevalence, distribution and risk factors in northeast population without preceding large-area stroke
作者单位:LIU Peng-fei,GAO Pei-yi(Department of Neuroradioiogy, Beijing Tiantan Hospital, Capital Medical University, Beijing 100050, China);CUI Ying-zhe,NA Jing(Department of Radiology, the First Affiliated Hospital of HarbinMedical University, Harbin 150001, China) 
基金项目:National Key Project of Scientific and Technical Supporting Programs Funded by Ministry of Science & Technology of China During the 11th Five-year Plan,No. 2007BAI05B07;
摘    要:

Background  Cerebral microbleeds (CMBs) occur frequently in patients suspected of cerebrovascular disease and they are the principle radiographic findings in patients with sub-clinical neurological impairment. The objective of this study was to assess the prevalence, distribution, severity and associated clinical features of CMBs in a prospective hospital patient based cohort undergoing brain MRI for suspected cerebrovascular disease, excluding cases with known intracranial hemorrhage or prior large-area stroke.
Methods  The study population consisted of 447 patients who were evaluated with T2*-gradient echo sequences to detect the CMBs lesion number, location, and their association with white matter hyperintensities and clinical parameters, including blood pressure.
Results  CMB lesions were presented in 95 of the 447 patients (21.3%). The distribution of CMBs was 43.95% cortical, 19.77% thalamic, 14.41% in the brainstem, 11.58% cerebellar, 6.21% periventricular white matter, 5.64% involving the basal ganglia regions, and 0.28% involving the hippocampus. There was a statistically significant association between the presence of CMBs and advancing age (adjusted OR 2.082, P <0.01), the severity of hypertension (adjusted OR 2.208, P <0.01). Also there was a statistically significant (P <0.01) correlation between the presence of CMBs and the severity of hypertension and white matter lesions.
Conclusions  CMBs occur frequently in patients with no prior large-area stroke who were referred for brain MRI for suspected cerebrovascular disease. The severity of CMBs correlates with the severity of hypertension and the presence of cerebral white matter changes detected by MRI.



关 键 词:cerebral microbleeds   magnetic resonance imaging   gradient echo sequences   hypertension   factor analysis

Cerebral microbleeds-prevalence, distribution and risk factors in northeast population without preceding large-area stroke
LIU Peng-fei,CUI Ying-zhe,NA Jing,GAO Pei-yi. Cerebral microbleeds-prevalence, distribution and risk factors in northeast population without preceding large-area stroke[J]. Chinese medical journal, 2010, 123(3): 286-290. DOI: 10.3760/cma.j.issn.0366-6999.2010.03.006
Authors:LIU Peng-fei  CUI Ying-zhe  NA Jing  GAO Pei-yi
Abstract:Background Cerebral microbleeds (CMBs) occur frequently in patients suspected of cerebrovascular disease and they are the principle radiographic findings in patients with sub-clinical neurological impairment. The objective of this study was to assess the prevalence, distribution, severity and associated clinical features of CMBs in a prospective hospital patient based cohort undergoing brain MRI for suspected cerebrovascular disease, excluding cases with known intracranial hemorrhage or prior large-area stroke.Methods The study population consisted of 447 patients who were evaluated with T2~*-gradient echo sequences to detect the CMBs lesion number, location, and their association with white matter hyperintensities and clinical parameters, including blood pressure.Results CMB lesions were presented in 95 of the 447 patients (21.3%). The distribution of CMBs was 43.95% cortical, 19.77% thalamic, 14.41% in the brainstem, 11.58% cerebellar, 6.21% periventricular white matter, 5.64% involving the basal ganglia regions, and 0.28% involving the hippocampus. There was a statistically significant association between the presence of CMBs and advancing age (adjusted OR 2.082, P <0.01), the severity of hypertension (adjusted OR 2.208, P <0.01). Also there was a statistically significant (P <0.01) correlation between the presence of CMBs and the severity of hypertension and white matter lesions.Conclusions CMBs occur frequently in patients with no prior large-area stroke who were referred for brain MRI for suspected cerebrovascular disease. The severity of CMBs correlates with the severity of hypertension and the presence of cerebral white matter changes detected by MRI.
Keywords:cerebral microbleeds  magnetic resonance imaging  gradient echo sequences  hypertension  factor analysis
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