AI Article Synopsis

  • There is a lack of scientific reports from sub-Saharan Africa regarding spontaneous intracerebral hemorrhage (sICH), but a 5-year hospital database was used to study this condition.
  • The study involved 63 patients, predominantly male, with a median age of 55.7 years; most cases were linked to uncontrolled hypertension and presented with severe symptoms after a median delay of 72 hours.
  • sICH primarily affected areas of the brain like the ganglion and thalamus, with a substantial number showing signs of intraventricular hemorrhage, highlighting the critical nature of the condition and the need for timely intervention.

Article Abstract

Background: There is paucity of data-driven scientific reports from sub-Saharan Africa on the burden of spontaneous intracerebral hemorrhage (sICH). We have maintained a prospective consecutive in-hospital database of cases of sICH referred for neurosurgical intervention over a 5-year period.

Methods: This is a cross-sectional descriptive study of the clinical epidemiology and brain computed tomography (CT) characterization of sICH from the database in this region in the current era.

Results: There were 63 subjects, 38 (60.3%) males, aged 28-85 years, mean 55.7 (SD, 12.7), the modal age distribution being the sixth decade. Uncontrolled hypertension was the main predisposition in the study: present, premorbid, in 79%, but uncontrolled in 88% of these known cases, and exhibited malignant derangements of blood pressure in more than half. The clinical ictus to in-hospital presentation was delayed, median 72 h; was in severe clinical state in 70%, 57% was comatose; and was complicated with fever in 57% and respiratory morbidity in 55.6%. The main clinical symptomatology was hemiparesis, headache, vomiting, and aphasia. The sICH was supratentorial on brain CT in 90.5%, ganglionic in 50.8%, and thalamic in 58.3% of the latter. The bleed had CT evidence of mass effect and intraventricular extension (IVH) in more than half. Twenty-three patients (36.5%) underwent operative interventions.

Conclusion: In this patient population, sICH is mainly ganglionic and thalamic in location with significant rate of associated IVH. In-hospital clinical presentation is delayed, and in a critical state, the bleeding is uncontrolled hypertension related in >95%.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4525060PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fneur.2015.00169DOI Listing

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