Incidence and predictive factors of diaphragmatic dysfunction in acute stroke

Abstract Background The most characteristic clinical signs of stroke are motor and/or sensory involvement of one side of the body. Respiratory involvement has also been described, which could be related to diaphragmatic dysfunction contralateral to the brain injury. Our objective is to establish the...

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Main Authors: José Vicente Catalá-Ripoll, José Ángel Monsalve-Naharro, Francisco Hernández-Fernández
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2020-03-01
Series:BMC Neurology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12883-020-01664-w
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spelling doaj-ddeca5e6a727406fa4ae293023caa2fb2020-11-25T02:56:35ZengBMCBMC Neurology1471-23772020-03-0120111010.1186/s12883-020-01664-wIncidence and predictive factors of diaphragmatic dysfunction in acute strokeJosé Vicente Catalá-Ripoll0José Ángel Monsalve-Naharro1Francisco Hernández-Fernández2Department of Anesthesiology and Critical Care Medicine, Complejo Hospitalario Universitario de AlbaceteDepartment of Anesthesiology and Critical Care Medicine, Complejo Hospitalario Universitario de AlbaceteDepartment of Neurology, Unit of Interventional Neuroradiology, Complejo Hospitalario Universitario de AlbaceteAbstract Background The most characteristic clinical signs of stroke are motor and/or sensory involvement of one side of the body. Respiratory involvement has also been described, which could be related to diaphragmatic dysfunction contralateral to the brain injury. Our objective is to establish the incidence of diaphragmatic dysfunction in ischaemic stroke and analyse the relationship between this and the main prognostic markers. Methods A prospective study of 60 patients with supratentorial ischaemic stroke in the first 48 h. Demographic and clinical factors were recorded. A diaphragmatic ultrasound was performed for the diagnosis of diaphragmatic dysfunction by means of the thickening fraction, during normal breathing and after forced inspiration. Diaphragmatic dysfunction was considered as a thickening fraction lower than 20%. The appearance of respiratory symptoms, clinical outcomes and mortality were recorded for 6 months. A bivariate and multivariate statistical analysis was designed to relate the incidence of respiratory involvement with the diagnosis of diaphragmatic dysfunction and with the main clinical determinants. Results An incidence of diaphragmatic dysfunction of 51.7% was observed. 70% (23 cases) of these patients developed symptoms of severe respiratory compromise during follow-up. Independent predictors were diaphragmatic dysfunction in basal respiration (p = 0.026), hemiparesis (p = 0.002) and female sex (p = 0.002). The cut-off point of the thickening fraction with greater sensitivity (75.75%) and specificity (62.9%) was 24% (p = 0.003). Conclusions There is a high incidence of diaphragmatic dysfunction in patients with supratentorial ischaemic stroke which can be studied by calculating the thickening fraction on ultrasound. Among these patients we have detected a higher incidence of severe respiratory involvement.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12883-020-01664-wStrokeRespiratory, insufficiencyDiaphragmatic paralysisUltrasound
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author José Vicente Catalá-Ripoll
José Ángel Monsalve-Naharro
Francisco Hernández-Fernández
spellingShingle José Vicente Catalá-Ripoll
José Ángel Monsalve-Naharro
Francisco Hernández-Fernández
Incidence and predictive factors of diaphragmatic dysfunction in acute stroke
BMC Neurology
Stroke
Respiratory, insufficiency
Diaphragmatic paralysis
Ultrasound
author_facet José Vicente Catalá-Ripoll
José Ángel Monsalve-Naharro
Francisco Hernández-Fernández
author_sort José Vicente Catalá-Ripoll
title Incidence and predictive factors of diaphragmatic dysfunction in acute stroke
title_short Incidence and predictive factors of diaphragmatic dysfunction in acute stroke
title_full Incidence and predictive factors of diaphragmatic dysfunction in acute stroke
title_fullStr Incidence and predictive factors of diaphragmatic dysfunction in acute stroke
title_full_unstemmed Incidence and predictive factors of diaphragmatic dysfunction in acute stroke
title_sort incidence and predictive factors of diaphragmatic dysfunction in acute stroke
publisher BMC
series BMC Neurology
issn 1471-2377
publishDate 2020-03-01
description Abstract Background The most characteristic clinical signs of stroke are motor and/or sensory involvement of one side of the body. Respiratory involvement has also been described, which could be related to diaphragmatic dysfunction contralateral to the brain injury. Our objective is to establish the incidence of diaphragmatic dysfunction in ischaemic stroke and analyse the relationship between this and the main prognostic markers. Methods A prospective study of 60 patients with supratentorial ischaemic stroke in the first 48 h. Demographic and clinical factors were recorded. A diaphragmatic ultrasound was performed for the diagnosis of diaphragmatic dysfunction by means of the thickening fraction, during normal breathing and after forced inspiration. Diaphragmatic dysfunction was considered as a thickening fraction lower than 20%. The appearance of respiratory symptoms, clinical outcomes and mortality were recorded for 6 months. A bivariate and multivariate statistical analysis was designed to relate the incidence of respiratory involvement with the diagnosis of diaphragmatic dysfunction and with the main clinical determinants. Results An incidence of diaphragmatic dysfunction of 51.7% was observed. 70% (23 cases) of these patients developed symptoms of severe respiratory compromise during follow-up. Independent predictors were diaphragmatic dysfunction in basal respiration (p = 0.026), hemiparesis (p = 0.002) and female sex (p = 0.002). The cut-off point of the thickening fraction with greater sensitivity (75.75%) and specificity (62.9%) was 24% (p = 0.003). Conclusions There is a high incidence of diaphragmatic dysfunction in patients with supratentorial ischaemic stroke which can be studied by calculating the thickening fraction on ultrasound. Among these patients we have detected a higher incidence of severe respiratory involvement.
topic Stroke
Respiratory, insufficiency
Diaphragmatic paralysis
Ultrasound
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12883-020-01664-w
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