4.7 Review

Supracardiac atherosclerosis in embolic stroke of undetermined source: the underestimated source

Journal

EUROPEAN HEART JOURNAL
Volume 42, Issue 18, Pages 1789-1796

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/eurheartj/ehaa218

Keywords

Supracardiac atherosclerosis; Embolic stroke of undetermined source

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ESUS refers to patients with embolic stroke of undetermined source, which may be mainly caused by covert atrial fibrillation or atherosclerotic plaques. Advanced imaging methods can aid in identifying high-risk plaques. The role of novel antithrombotic strategies in these patients needs further evaluation in randomized controlled trials.
The term 'embolic stroke of undetermined source' (ESUS) is used to describe patients with a non-lacunar ischaemic stroke without any identified embolic source from the heart or the arteries supplying the ischaemic territory, or any other apparent cause. When the ESUS concept was introduced, covert atrial fibrillation was conceived to be the main underlying cause in the majority of ESUS patients. Another important embolic source in ESUS is the atherosclerotic plaque in the carotid, vertebrobasilar, and intracranial arteries, or the aortic arch-collectively described as supracardiac atherosclerosis. There is emerging evidence showing that the role of supracardiac atherosclerosis is larger than it was initially perceived. Advanced imaging methods are available to identify plaques which high embolic risk. The role of novel antithrombotic strategies in these patients needs to be assessed in randomized controlled trials. This review presents the evidence which points towards a major aetiological association between atherosclerotic plaques and ESUS, summarizes the imaging features which may aid to identify plaques more likely to be associated with ESUS, discusses strategies to reduce the associated stroke risk, and highlights the rationale for future research in this field.

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