Perimesencephalic Hemorrhage: A Review of Epidemiology, Risk Factors, Presumed Cause, Clinical Course, and Outcome

Publication date

2018-06

Authors

Mensing, Liselore A.
Vergouwen, Mervyn D IISNI 0000000393548675
Laban, Kamil G.
Ruigrok, Ynte M.ORCID 0000-0002-5396-2989ISNI 0000000389818257
Velthuis, BirgittaORCID 0000-0002-2542-9474ISNI 0000000395231874
Algra, AleORCID 0000-0003-2858-5808ISNI 0000000396187617
Rinkel, Gabriel J EISNI 0000000388847590

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Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article

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License

taverne

Abstract

BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: We systematically reviewed the literature on epidemiology, risk factors, presumed cause, clinical course, and outcome of perimesencephalic hemorrhage. METHODS: PubMed, Embase, and the Cochrane Library were searched until March 2016. Quality assessment was done by 2 authors independently. Pooled prevalence ratios and pooled odds ratios with 95% confidence intervals were calculated for data extracted from case-control studies. RESULTS: We included 208 papers. The incidence of perimesencephalic hemorrhage is ≈0.5 per 100.000 person-years, men are more often affected, and no risk factors were confirmed. Two decision analyses both found that a single, high-quality computed tomography angiography is the preferred diagnostic approach. Short-term complications, such as hydrocephalus or cranial nerve palsies, are rare, and usually transient, with the exception of acute symptomatic hydrocephalus necessitating treatment in 3% of patients. Lacunar infarcts in the brain stem were convincingly described in 4 patients only. Fatal rebleeding after installment of anticoagulation in the initial days after the hemorrhage was described in 1 patient. At long-term follow-up, death related to the hemorrhage has not been reported, disability is found in 0% to 6%, and neuropsychological sequelae are suggested. CONCLUSIONS: A single, high-quality computed tomography angiography is the preferred diagnostic strategy. Short-term complications are rare and often transient. Long-term outcome is excellent with respect to disability and death, but high-quality studies focused at neuropsychological sequelae are needed.

Keywords

case-control studies, cerebrovascular diseases, epidemiology, risk factors, subarachnoid hemorrhage, Taverne, Clinical Neurology, Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine, Advanced and Specialised Nursing, Review, Journal Article

Citation

Mensing, L A, Vergouwen, M D I, Laban, K G, Ruigrok, Y M, Velthuis, B K, Algra, A & Rinkel, G J E 2018, 'Perimesencephalic Hemorrhage : A Review of Epidemiology, Risk Factors, Presumed Cause, Clinical Course, and Outcome', Stroke, vol. 49, no. 6, pp. 1363-1370. https://doi.org/10.1161/STROKEAHA.117.019843