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Embolic Brain Infarction in Nonrheumatic Atrial Fibrillation
Neurol 48:1593-1597, Yamanouchi,H.,et al, 1997
See this aricle in Pubmed

Article Abstract
Although CT studies have addressed symptomatic and asymptomatic cerebral infarctions in nonrheumatic atrial fibrillation(NRAF),pathologic verification of the results is lacking.The purpose of this study was to asses the frequency,location,and extent of symptomatic and asymptomatic brain infarction in autopsy specimens from elderly patients with NRAF.We examined autopsy specimens from 136 consecutive NRAF patients 70 years of age or older who received no anticoagulant therapy during their lifetime and compared them with 231 age-matched control subjects with similar health histories except for the absence of NRAF.In this autopsy series of individuals over 70 years of age,symptomatic brain infarction was 2.5 times more common in NRAF patients than in NRAF-free control subjects;two- thirds of the infarction in the NRAF cases were judged to be cardioembolic in origin.Most asymptomatic cerebral infarction in the NRAF patients were located in the cortices.
 
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asymptomatic
atrial fibrillation
atrial fibrillation,nonvalvular
cerebral embolism
cerebral embolism,cardiac origin
cerebral infarction
cerebrovascular accident
cerebrovascular accident,silent
mortality
neuropathology
old age,neurology of
prognosis

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