Acute silent cerebral ischemic events in children with sickle cell anemia.
Publication/Presentation Date
1-1-2013
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Irregular, sporadic episodes of ischemic brain injury are known to occur in sickle cell anemia (SCA), resulting in overt stroke and silent cerebral infarction. Ongoing ischemia in other organs is common in SCA but has never been documented in the brain.
OBJECTIVE: To test the hypothesis that acute silent cerebral ischemic events (ASCIEs) are frequent and potentially transient.
DESIGN: Cross-sectional and cohort study of children with SCA screened by magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) of the brain for a randomized clinical trial.
SETTING: Clinical trial setting in tertiary care centers.
PATIENTS: Asymptomatic children with SCA without known stroke, neurologic injury, or epilepsy not receiving treatment with transfusions or hydroxyurea.
MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE: Incidence of ASCIEs calculated using single diffusion-weighted MRI scans (acute ischemic events that occurred within 10 days of the MRI).
RESULTS: Acute silent cerebral ischemic events were detected on 1.3% of MRIs (10 of 771) in 652 children (mean age, 10.0 years), with an incidence of 47.3 events per 100 patient-years (95% CI, 22.7-87.2). Two of 10 children with ASCIEs had follow-up MRIs of the brain; only 1 had silent cerebral infarction in the same location as the previously detected ASCIE.
CONCLUSIONS: Children with SCA experience ongoing (chronic, intermittent) cerebral ischemia, sometimes reversible, far more frequently than previously recognized. The brain in SCA is at constant threat of ischemia.
Volume
70
Issue
1
First Page
58
Last Page
65
ISSN
2168-6157
Published In/Presented At
Quinn, C. T., McKinstry, R. C., Dowling, M. M., Ball, W. S., Kraut, M. A., Casella, J. F., Dlamini, N., Ichord, R. N., Jordan, L. C., Kirkham, F. J., Noetzel, M. J., Roach, E. S., Strouse, J. J., Kwiatkowski, J. L., Hirtz, D., & DeBaun, M. R. (2013). Acute silent cerebral ischemic events in children with sickle cell anemia. JAMA neurology, 70(1), 58–65. https://doi.org/10.1001/jamaneurol.2013.576
Disciplines
Medicine and Health Sciences | Pediatrics
PubMedID
23108767
Department(s)
Department of Pediatrics
Document Type
Article