Home
Subject List
Alphabetical List
Help
FAQ
Highlights
Deutsche Version
Quick Search
Advanced Search >>
Single Articles
View Shopping Cart
LogIn
Username
Password
Register Now
Thieme eJournals / AbstractContact Us

Semin Neurol 2005; 25: 424-434
DOI: 10.1055/s-2005-923536

Copyright © 2005 by Thieme Medical Publishers, Inc., 333 Seventh Avenue, New York, NY 10001, USA.
 
 
Perinatal Arterial Stroke: Understanding Mechanisms and Outcomes
 
Yvonne W. Wu1, John K. Lynch2, Karin B. Nelson2
1 Department of Neurology, University of California San Francisco, San Francisco, California
2 Neuroepidemiology Branch, National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke, Bethesda, Maryland

ABSTRACT

Arterial ischemic infarction occurring around the time of birth is an increasingly recognized cause of neurological disability in children. The rate of arterial infarction in neonates is as high as the annual incidence of large-vessel ischemic stroke in adults. Factors contributing to this increased risk of stroke among neonates include complications that occur before, during, and after delivery. Maternal conditions that have been associated with perinatal stroke in the fetus include prothrombotic disorders, cocaine abuse, and placental complications such as chorioamnionitis and placental vasculopathy. In many cases, the placenta is suspected to be the underlying embolic source for perinatal stroke, although data on placental pathology is often lacking. During the delivery process, an infant may develop a cervical arterial dissection that leads to stroke. Several conditions in the neonatal period predispose to perinatal stroke including prothrombotic disorders, congenital heart disease, meningitis, and systemic infection. Perinatal stroke may present with neonatal seizures during the first weeks of life or may be asymptomatic until months later when the infant is first noted to have pathological handedness. The outcome of perinatal stroke is variable and depends on severity, anatomic localization, and other factors not yet well characterized. As many as 50% of infants with documented stroke recognized in the newborn period do not develop a hemiparesis. The incidence, clinical presentation, pathogenesis, risk factors, and outcome of this increasingly recognized disorder are reviewed.

KEYWORDS

Perinatal arterial stroke - epidemiology - risk factors - outcome

 
Full text (English) as
HTML (86 kb)  PDF (118 kb)
Table of Contents
Other Issues:
About This Journal
Editorial Information
Instructions for Authors
Subscribe Now
Service
Sample Issue (01/2009)
Recommend Article
Recommend Journal
German National License
Download Bibliographical Data
Bookmark Article
Delicious    Delicious



©
Thieme eJournals is a service of the Thieme Medical Publishers, Inc. and
Georg Thieme Verlag.
Georg Thieme Verlag KG Stuttgart New York. All rights reserved.
Impressum / Disclaimer