4.5 Article

Cerebral venous thrombosis: a retrospective unicentric analysis of clinical and neuroimaging characteristics

Journal

NEUROLOGICAL SCIENCES
Volume 43, Issue 3, Pages 1839-1847

Publisher

SPRINGER-VERLAG ITALIA SRL
DOI: 10.1007/s10072-021-05514-6

Keywords

Cerebral venous thrombosis; Clinical presentation; Headache; Risk factors; Neuroimaging

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Thrombosis of dural sinuses and/or cerebral veins (CVT) is an uncommon form of stroke that usually affects young individuals. The clinical presentation varies, with symptoms ranging from mild headaches to severe encephalopathy, coma, or seizures.
Thrombosis of dural sinuses and/or cerebral veins (CVT) is an uncommon form of stroke, usually affecting young individuals. It has a variable clinical presentation ranging from mild cases presenting only headaches, to severe cases featuring encephalopathy, coma or status epilepticus. A retrospective cross-sectional study of patients treated in the outpatient department and in-hospital during the period from 2014 to 2020 at the Neurology Clinic-University Clinical Centre of Serbia was conducted. Forty-nine patients (24 men; 25 women) were included in the study. Twenty-three patients (46.9%) suffered a subacute form of CVT (48 h-4 weeks), 19 (38.8%) presented with an acute form (< 48 h) and 7 (14.3%) with a chronic form (> 4 weeks). Around 75% of patients reported headaches during disease course. Focal neurological deficit (FND) was observed in 27 (55.1%) patients. Patients who did not report headaches (22.4%) presented with more severe symptoms (seizures and coma). More than 70% of patients had no radiologically evident brain parenchymal lesion. The most frequent locations of CVT were transverse sinus (79.6%), sigmoid sinus (44.9%) and superior sagittal sinus (36.7%). Thrombosis of more than one sinus/vein occurred in 33 (67.3%) patients. Hereditary thrombophilia was observed in 9 (18.4%) patients, 11 (22.4%) patients had some type of infection and 20% of women reported OCT usage. As much as 25% of cases remained without evident risk factors. The most common symptom in our cohort was acute unilateral throbbing headache of high intensity, while patients without headaches had more severe symptoms.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.5
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available