Advertisement
Research Article| Volume 25, ISSUE 6, P1417-1420, June 2016

Low Ankle-Brachial Index is a Simple Physical Exam Sign Predicting Intracranial Atherosclerotic Stenosis in Ischemic Stroke Patients

      Background

      The investigation of ischemic stroke etiology is commonly limited to the heart and extracranial vessels. Nevertheless, the diagnosis of intracranial stenosis may carry important therapeutic implications. The aims of this study were to determine the prevalence and clinical predictors of intracranial atherosclerotic stenosis (ICAS) in a sample of patients with ischemic stroke.

      Methods

      Consecutive patients admitted to a university-based outpatient stroke clinic underwent CT angiography of the intracranial and extracranial brain vessels. Clinical, demographic, and laboratory characteristics were compared between patients with increasing levels of stenosis. Ankle-brachial index (ABI) was measured to quantify peripheral arterial disease, defined as an ABI less than or equal to .9. Multivariable ordinal logistic regression was constructed to predict increasing stenosis grades (none, 1%-49%—mild, 50%-69%—moderate, 70%-100%—severe).

      Results

      We studied 106 subjects, mean age 62 ± 15 years, 54% female. ICAS was present in 38 (36%) patients: 19 (50%) mild, 7 (18%) moderate, and 12 (32%) severe. Of 74 patients where ABI was measured, low ABI was found more frequently with increasing ICAS severity (26%, 42%, 67%, and 89% of patients with none, mild, moderate, and severe ICAS, respectively). In univariable analysis, higher age, presence of diabetes, abdominal obesity, and low ABI correlated with increasing stenosis grades. In multivariable analysis, only low ABI remained independently associated with increasing stenosis grades.

      Conclusions

      The ABI is independently associated with increasing severity of ICAS, making it a potentially useful triaging tool for more invasive test selection.

      Key Words

      To read this article in full you will need to make a payment

      Purchase one-time access:

      Academic & Personal: 24 hour online accessCorporate R&D Professionals: 24 hour online access
      One-time access price info
      • For academic or personal research use, select 'Academic and Personal'
      • For corporate R&D use, select 'Corporate R&D Professionals'

      Subscribe:

      Subscribe to Journal of Stroke and Cerebrovascular Diseases
      Already a print subscriber? Claim online access
      Already an online subscriber? Sign in
      Institutional Access: Sign in to ScienceDirect

      References

        • Sacco R.L.
        • Kargman D.E.
        • Gu Q.
        • et al.
        Race-ethnicity and determinants of intracranial atherosclerotic cerebral infarction. The Northern Manhattan Stroke Study.
        Stroke. 1995; 26: 14
        • Wong K.S.
        • Ng P.W.
        • Tang A.
        • et al.
        Prevalence of asymptomatic intracranial atherosclerosis in high-risk patients.
        Neurology. 2007; 68: 2035-2038
        • Wong K.S.
        • Huang Y.N.
        • Yang H.B.
        • et al.
        A door-to-door survey of intracranial atherosclerosis in Liangbei County, China.
        Neurology. 2007; 68: 2031-2034
        • Lopez-Cancio E.
        • Dorado L.
        • Millan M.
        • et al.
        The Barcelona Asymptomatic Intracranial Atherosclerosis (AsIA) study: prevalence and risk factors.
        Atherosclerosis. 2012; 221: 221-225
        • Kamal A.K.
        • Rasheed A.
        • Mehmood K.
        • et al.
        Frequency and determinants of intracranial atherosclerotic stroke in urban Pakistan.
        J Stroke Cerebrovasc Dis. 2014; 23: 2174-2182
        • Kim B.J.
        • Hong K.S.
        • Cho Y.J.
        • et al.
        Predictors of symptomatic and asymptomatic intracranial atherosclerosis: what is different and why?.
        J Atheroscler Thromb. 2014; 21: 605-617
        • Wang Y.
        • Zhao X.
        • Liu L.
        • et al.
        Prevalence and outcomes of symptomatic intracranial large artery stenoses and occlusions in China: the Chinese Intracranial Atherosclerosis (CICAS) Study.
        Stroke. 2014; 45: 663-669
        • Winsor T.
        Influence of arterial disease on the systolic blood pressure gradients of the extremity.
        Am J Med Sci. 1950; 220: 117-126
        • Hirsch A.T.
        • Haskal Z.J.
        • Hertzer N.R.
        • et al.
        ACC/AHA 2005 practice guidelines for the management of patients with peripheral arterial disease (lower extremity, renal, mesenteric, and abdominal aortic).
        Circulation. 2006; 113: e463-e654
        • Imori Y.
        • Akasaka T.
        • Ochiai T.
        • et al.
        Co-existence of carotid artery disease, renal artery stenosis, and lower extremity peripheral arterial disease in patients with coronary artery disease.
        Am J Cardiol. 2014; 113: 30-35
        • Marsico F.
        • Ruggiero D.
        • Parente A.
        • et al.
        Prevalence and severity of asymptomatic coronary and carotid artery disease in patients with lower limbs arterial disease.
        Atherosclerosis. 2013; 228: 386-389
        • Huang H.W.
        • Guo M.H.
        • Lin R.J.
        • et al.
        Prevalence and risk factors of middle cerebral artery stenosis in asymptomatic residents in Rongqi County, Guangdong.
        Cerebrovasc Dis. 2007; 24: 111-115
        • Bae H.J.
        • Lee J.
        • Park J.M.
        • et al.
        Risk factors of intracranial cerebral atherosclerosis among asymptomatics.
        Cerebrovasc Dis. 2007; 24: 355-360
        • Tsivgoulis G.
        • Vadikolias K.
        • Heliopoulos I.
        • et al.
        Prevalence of symptomatic intracranial atherosclerosis in Caucasians: a prospective, multicenter, transcranial Doppler study.
        J Neuroimaging. 2012; 24: 11-17
        • Uehara T.
        • Tabuchi M.
        • Mori E.
        Risk factors for occlusive lesions of intracranial arteries in stroke-free Japanese.
        Eur J Neurol. 2005; 12: 218-222
        • He S.W.
        • Huang H.W.
        • Tan S.Q.
        • et al.
        Role of abdominal obesity in asymptomatic intracranial arterial stenosis: a community-based study.
        Zhonghua Yi Xue Za Zhi. 2010; 90: 748-751
        • Mannami T.
        • Baba S.
        • Ogata J.
        Strong and significant relationships between aggregation of major coronary risk factors and the acceleration of carotid atherosclerosis in the general population of a Japanese city: the Suita Study.
        Arch Intern Med. 2000; 160: 2297
        • Turan T.N.
        • Makki A.A.
        • Tsappidi S.
        • et al.
        Risk factors associated with severity and location of intracranial arterial stenosis.
        Stroke. 2010; 41: 1636
        • Sacco R.L.
        • Kargman D.E.
        • Zamanillo M.C.
        Race-ethnic differences in stroke risk factors among hospitalized patients with cerebral infarction: the Northern Manhattan Stroke Study.
        Neurology. 1995; 45: 659
        • Ingall T.J.
        • Homer D.
        • Baker Jr, H.L.
        • et al.
        Predictors of intracranial carotid artery atherosclerosis. Duration of cigarette smoking and hypertension are more powerful than serum lipid levels.
        Arch Neurol. 1991; 48: 687