Journal of Atherosclerosis and Thrombosis
Online ISSN : 1880-3873
Print ISSN : 1340-3478
ISSN-L : 1340-3478
Atherogenic Dyslipidemia Is Critically Related to Aortic Complicated Lesions in Cryptogenic Stroke
Muneaki KikunoYuji UenoYohei TateishiAyako KurikiRyosuke DoijiriTakahiro ShimizuHidehiro TakekawaKodai KanemaruYoshiaki ShimadaEriko YamaguchiMasatoshi KogaYuki KamiyaMasafumi IharaAkira TsujinoKoichi HirataYasuhiro HasegawaHitoshi AizawaHiroo TerashiNobutaka HattoriTakao UrabeCHALLENGE ESUS/CS collaborators
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JOURNAL OPEN ACCESS Advance online publication

Article ID: 65289

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Abstract

Aims: Atherogenic dyslipidemia (AD) is regarded as a residual risk of cardiovascular diseases characterized by low high-density lipoprotein cholesterol (HDL-C) and high triglyceride (TG) levels and related to the intracranial stenosis of atheromatous thrombotic brain infarction (ATBI). Further, atherosclerosis is possibly related to another stroke subtype, including cryptogenic stroke (CS). In particular, an aortic complicated lesion (ACL) is a notable embolic source of CS, since recurrence of aortogenic brain embolism is not rare. This study aimed to clarify the underlying association between AD and CS.

Methods: CHALLENGE ESUS/CS (Mechanisms of Embolic Stroke Clarified by Transesophageal Echocardiography for ESUS/CS) had extensive data from CS patients who underwent transesophageal echocardiography (TEE). AD was defined as HDL-C ≤ 40 mg/dl and TG ≥ 150 mg/dl. Based on these criteria, patients were divided into an AD group and a non-AD group to compare the clinical features.

Results: Of 664 CS patients (446 men, 68.7±12.8 years), 68 (10.2%) met the criteria of AD (AD group), and 596 (89.8%) were in the non-AD group. On multiple logistic regression analysis, body mass index (unit OR 1.11, 95%CI 1.04-1.19, p=0.002), diabetes mellitus (OR 2.23, 95%CI 1.28-3.87, p=0.004), ACL in the arch (OR 1.89, 95%CI 1.09-3.31, p=0.025), and deterioration during hospitalization (OR 3.96, 95%CI 1.32-10.68, p=0.009) were independently associated with AD.

Conclusion: AD was not rare in the present CS population. Moreover, AD was crucially related to ACL in CS. Therefore, intensive and pleiotropic lipid-modifying therapy would be efficacious for further treatment of aortogenic brain embolism.

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