AI Article Synopsis

  • The study compares the effectiveness of echocardiography and cardiovascular MRI (CMR) in diagnosing structural causes of embolism in ischemic stroke patients, using data from various sources including non-stroke populations.
  • Out of 27 studies involving 2,525 patients, it was found that both diagnostic methods had similar yields for detecting left ventricular thrombus but CMR outperformed echocardiography in non-stroke patients; however, it was less effective for detecting persistent foramen ovale in stroke populations.
  • Despite the insights gained, the actual clinical impact of these diagnostic findings on patient management remains unclear, indicating a need for more randomized controlled trials to better understand their benefits.

Article Abstract

To compare the diagnostic yield of echocardiography and cardiovascular MRI (CMR) to detect structural sources of embolism, in patients with ischemic stroke with a secondary analysis of non-stroke populations. We searched MEDLINE/Embase (from 01.01.2000 to 24.04.2021) for studies including CMR to assess prespecified sources of embolism. Comparison included transthoracic and/or transesophageal echocardiography. Two authors independently screened studies, extracted data and assessed bias using the QUADAS-2 tool. Estimates of diagnostic yield were reported and pooled. Twenty-seven studies with 2,525 patients were included in a study-level analysis. Most studies had moderate to high risk of bias. Persistent foramen ovale, complex aortic plaques, left ventricular and left atrial thrombus were the most common pathologies. There was no difference in the yield of left ventricular thrombus detection between both modalities for stroke populations (4 studies), but an increased yield of CMR in non-stroke populations (28.1 vs. 16.0%, < 0.001, 10 studies). The diagnostic yield in stroke patients for detection of persistent foramen ovale was lower in CMR compared to transoesophageal echocardiography (29.3 vs. 53.7%, < 0.001, 5 studies). For both echocardiography and CMR the clinical impact of the management consequences derived from many of the diagnostic findings remained undetermined in the identified studies. Echocardiography and CMR seem to have similar diagnostic yield for most cardioaortic sources of embolism except persistent foramen ovale and left ventricular thrombus. Randomized controlled diagnostic trials are necessary to understand the impact on the management and potential clinical benefits of the assessment of structural cardioaortic stroke sources. PROSPERO: CRD42020158787.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8362907PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fneur.2021.699838DOI Listing

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