Panel 2.
Alternative cause | Clues that the cause is NOT intrinsic small vessel disease | Investigations |
---|---|---|
*Brain imaging, neck artery imaging, BP, routine haematology, blood glucose, lipids, coagulation, liver, kidney function tests, proteinuria | ||
Cardioembolic: | • Clinical history, symptoms, and findings suggesting cardiac disease • Contemporaneous cortical and small subcortical infarcts • Multiple contemporaneous infarcts in different arterial territories which may include a small subcortical infarct • Large subcortical infarct on imaging (as a guide, >2 cm axial diameter in the acute stage, although cardioembolic infarcts can be smaller and perceived size may depend on the type of imaging) |
*ECG
*Cardiac echocardiography including PFO detection** Prolonged ECG monitoring |
Large artery atherothromboembolism | • Contemporaneous cortical and small subcortical infarcts • Large subcortical infarct on imaging (>2 cm axial diameter in the acute stage) • Manifestations of atherosclerosis in other organs e.g. coronary arteries, aorta, extremities |
*Carotid/vertebral artery imaging, using ultrasound, CTA, or MRA |
Arterial dissection | • Clinical symptoms and findings suggesting dissection • Odd-shaped subcortical infarct • Presence of cortical infarct |
*Carotid/vertebral artery imaging, using ultrasound, CTA, or MRA |
Intracranial atheromatous stenosis | • Large subcortical infarct (>2 cm axial diameter) • Long tubular infarct (>2 cm long) extending from the inferior perforating substance superiorly into the basal ganglia |
Intracranial CT or MR angiography. Vessel wall MRI |
Rare monogenic causes | • Worse WMH, more lacunes, perivascular spaces, and microbleeds than usual for age, and vascular risk factors • Concomitant other manifestations from other organs, for example, eye, skin, heart, ear, kidney • Cerebral lesion distribution • Young onset • Family history |
Genetic testing |
Should be routine in all ischaemic strokes including lacunar.
PFO detection usually clinically relevant only for patients under 60–65 years of age.