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Accelerated Intracranial Occlusive Disease, Oral Contraceptives, and Cigarette Use
Neurol 41:1893-1901, Levine,S.R.,et al, 1991
See this aricle in Pubmed

Article Abstract
We report clinical and angiographic features of accelerated intracranial occlusive disease resembling moyamoya vasculopathy in five young women who used oral contraceptives(OCs)and smoked cigarettes,but generally had no other obvious risk factors for cerebrovascular disease.Three women had been on OCs for at least 4 years,one woman each had been on OCs for 3 months and for 2 weeks.All five women had smoked cigarettes for at least eight pack-years.Intermittent and progressive multifocal cognitive,visual, motor,or sensory hemispheric symptoms and signs developed in all.All patients developed strokes,four preceded by transient ischemic attacks. Cerebral angiography demonstrated bilateral supraclinoid internal carotid artery stenosis in four patients and proximal posterior cerebral artery stenosis in one.Additional features included rete mirabile, telangiectasias,prominent lenticulostriate collaterals,and multifocal distal cerebral branch occlusions.Three had mild abnormalities of serum fibrinogen,antinuclear antibody,erythrocyte sedimentation rate,or CSF IgG. After discounting OCs and reducing cigarette use,four women have not had further strokes over a mean follow-up of approximately 5 years.In certain young women,clinical and angiographic features resembling moyamoya may develop with the use of OCs and cigarettes.We speculate that an immunologically mediated vasculopathy may explain,in part,this unusual cerebrovascular syndrome in otherwise healthy young women.
 
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carotid angiogram
carotid artery disease
carotid artery stenosis
carotid artery stenosis,intracranial
cerebrovascular accident
cerebrovascular accident,young adult
cerebrovascular disease
cerebrovascular disease,risk factors in
cigarette smoking
moyamoya
moyamoya,adult
oral contraceptives
oral contraceptives,cerbrovascular disease and
transient ischemic attack

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