학술논문

Acute stroke in familial Mediterranean fever: An analysis of 23 new cases and systematic review of the literature.
Document Type
Article
Source
International Journal of Rheumatic Diseases. Apr2023, Vol. 26 Issue 4, p657-666. 10p.
Subject
*FAMILIAL Mediterranean fever
*STROKE
*ISCHEMIC stroke
*TRANSIENT ischemic attack
*DISEASE risk factors
Language
ISSN
1756-1841
Abstract
Objective: The nature of neurovascular involvement in cases of familial Mediterranean fever (FMF) has not been adequately clarified. Methods and Patients: Clinical features, infarct topography, vascular status, and stroke etiology were prospectively determined in 35 acute neurovascular events that occurred in 23 FMF patients. Clinicoradiological features were compared with an age‐ and gender‐matched control group of 115 acute stroke patients. Characteristics of additional FMF and acute stroke cases (6 episodes in 6 patients) identified from a systematic literature review (PROSPERO registration no: CRD420212264820) were also analyzed. Results: There were 27 acute ischemic stroke episodes in 19 patients, 7 transient ischemic attack episodes in 3 patients, and 1 patient with a single episode of parietal hematoma in our cohort. Twenty (74%) ischemic stroke episodes in 12 patients were cryptogenic. Ten of these 12 cases had a previous FMF diagnosis and were taking colchicine. There was no significant difference in the FMF group in terms of the presence of vascular risk factors and angiography‐documented disease in comparison to controls. Cerebral distal artery involvement was significantly prevalent in FMF (78% vs 45%, P =.002). Especially, midbrain central deep perforating territory involvement was higher (30% vs 1%, P <.001). The long‐term prognosis (median 8.5 years) under antiplatelet agents and colchicine is favorable. Discussion: The acute stroke phenotype in FMF cases is herein described for the first time. Several clinicoradiological features such as thrombotic lacunar infarcts located in the central mesencephalon seem so typical that we recommend searching for FMF mutations in geographic regions where FMF is common. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]