Spectrum of Cerebrovascular Disease in Scleroderma: A Case Series and Systematic Review.

Bibliographic Details
Title: Spectrum of Cerebrovascular Disease in Scleroderma: A Case Series and Systematic Review.
Authors: Rosso, Michela, Ramaswamy, Srinath, Aharonoff, David, Inanç, Murat, Levine, Steven R.
Source: Cerebrovascular Diseases; 2024, Vol. 53 Issue 4, p467-478, 12p
Subject Terms: SCLERODERMA (Disease), ISCHEMIC stroke, INTRACRANIAL aneurysms, HEMORRHAGIC stroke, CONSCIOUSNESS raising, CEREBROVASCULAR disease, INTRACRANIAL arterial diseases
Abstract: Introduction: Central nervous system involvement in scleroderma has traditionally been considered uncommon. Recent studies suggest that scleroderma might be associated with an increased risk of cerebrovascular disease (CBVD), independent of conventional cardiovascular risk factors. We present a case series and a systematic review to capture the spectrum of CBVD in scleroderma, through a detailed description of clinical, demographic, laboratory, and radiographical findings. Methods: In our case series, we included consecutive patients with scleroderma and CBVD seen over 35 years by our group in different hospitals in the USA. We also performed a systematic review from inception to July 2022. MEDLINE/Embase/WoS were searched for "scleroderma", "systemic scleroderma", "systemic sclerosis", "cerebrovascular", "stroke", "cerebrovascular disorders", "cerebrovascular disease". Results: Fourteen patients with scleroderma and CBVD were included in our case series (mean age 48 years, 85% female). CBVDs were ischemic stroke (64%), hemorrhagic stroke (7%), venous thrombosis (7%), ischemic optic neuropathy (7%), probable ischemic stroke (14%). Of the 110 studies identified in our systematic review (45,484 patients), 82 reports with patient-level data were included for quantitative analysis (93 patients, mean age 48 years, 79% female). Despite 16 different CBVD types identified, ischemic stroke was the most common CBVD (29%), followed by vasculopathy (20%), hemorrhage (12%), vasculitis (11%), and intracranial aneurysm (11%). Conclusion: Our relatively large case series combined with a systematic review of CBVD in SCL patients shows a heterogeneous spectrum of CBVD etiology, with acute ischemic stroke being the most common in our cases and in our literature review. A complex interaction between chronic inflammation, autoimmune mechanisms, and endothelial dysfunction seems to underlie the CBVD heterogeneity in scleroderma patients. This review informs clinicians about the spectrum of CBVD related to scleroderma and raise awareness about scleroderma being a possible risk factor for early-onset CBVD. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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Database: Complementary Index
More Details
ISSN:10159770
DOI:10.1159/000533230
Published in:Cerebrovascular Diseases
Language:English