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Dive into the research topics where Adrià Arboix is active.

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Featured researches published by Adrià Arboix.


Current Cardiology Reviews | 2010

Cardioembolic Stroke: Clinical Features, Specific Cardiac Disorders and Prognosis

Adrià Arboix; Josefina Alió

This article provides the reader with an overview and up-date of clinical features, specific cardiac disorders and prognosis of cardioembolic stroke. Cardioembolic stroke accounts for 14-30% of ischemic strokes and, in general, is a severe condition; patients with cardioembolic infarction are prone to early and long-term stroke recurrence, although recurrences may be preventable by appropriate treatment during the acute phase and strict control at follow-up. Certain clinical features are suggestive of cardioembolic infarction, including sudden onset to maximal deficit, decreased level of consciousness at onset, Wernicke’s aphasia or global aphasia without hemiparesis, a Valsalva manoeuvre at the time of stroke onset, and co-occurrence of cerebral and systemic emboli. Lacunar clinical presentations, a lacunar infarct and especially multiple lacunar infarcts, make cardioembolic origin unlikely. The more common high risk cardioembolic conditions are atrial fibrillation, recent myocardial infarction, mechanical prosthetic valve, dilated myocardiopathy, and mitral rheumatic stenosis. Transthoracic and transesophageal echocardiogram can disclose structural heart diseases. Paroxysmal atrial dysrhyhtmia can be detected by Holter monitoring. In-hospital mortality in cardioembolic stroke (27.3%, in our series) is the highest as compared with other subtypes of cerebral infarction. In our experience, in-hospital mortality in patients with early embolic recurrence (within the first 7 days) was 77%. Patients with alcohol abuse, hypertension, valvular heart disease, nausea and vomiting, and previous cerebral infarction are at increased risk of early recurrent systemic embolization. Secondary prevention with anticoagulants should be started immediately if possible in patients at high risk for recurrent cardioembolic stroke in which contraindications, such as falls, poor compliance, uncontrolled epilepsy or gastrointestinal bleeding are absent.


European Respiratory Journal | 2011

Early treatment of obstructive apnoea and stroke outcome: a randomised controlled trial

Olga Parra; Angeles Sánchez-Armengol; M. Bonnin; Adrià Arboix; Francisco Campos-Rodriguez; Jose Perez-Ronchel; J. Durán-Cantolla; G. de la Torre; J.R. González Marcos; M. de la Peña; M. Carmen Jiménez; Fernando Masa; Isabel Casado; M. Luz Alonso; J.L. Macarrón

The aim of the present study was to assess the impact of nasal continuous positive airway pressure (nCPAP) in ischaemic stroke patients followed for 2 yrs. Stroke patients with an apnoea–hypopnoea index ≥20 events·h−1 were randomised to early nCPAP (n = 71; 3–6 days after stroke onset) or conventional treatment (n = 69). The Barthel Index, Canadian Scale, Rankin Scale and Short Form-36 were measured at baseline, and at 1, 3, 12 and 24 months. The percentage of patients with neurological improvement 1 month after stroke was significantly higher in the nCPAP group (Rankin scale 90.9 versus 56.3% (p<0.01); Canadian scale 88.2 versus 72.7% (p<0.05)). The mean time until the appearance of cardiovascular events was longer in the nCPAP group (14.9 versus 7.9 months; p = 0.044), although cardiovascular event-free survival after 24 months was similar in both groups. The cardiovascular mortality rate was 0% in the nCPAP group and 4.3% in the control group (p = 0.161). Early use of nCPAP seems to accelerate neurological recovery and to delay the appearance of cardiovascular events, although an improvement in patients’ survival or quality of life was not shown.


Current Cardiology Reviews | 2010

Angiogenesis, Neurogenesis and Neuroplasticity in Ischemic Stroke

M. Angels Font; Adrià Arboix; Jerzy Krupinski

Only very little is know about the neurovascular niche after cardioembolic stroke. Three processes implicated in neurorepair: angiogenesis, neurogenesis and synaptic plasticity, would be naturally produced in adult brains, but also could be stimulated through endogen neurorepair phenomena. Angiogenesis stimulation generates new vessels with the aim to increase collateral circulation. Neurogenesis is controlled by intrinsic genetic mechanisms and growth factors but also ambiental factors are important. The leading process of the migrating neural progenitor cells (NPCs) is closely associated with blood vessels, suggesting that this interaction provides directional guidance to the NPCs. These findings suggest that blood vessels play an important role as a scaffold for NPCs migration toward the damaged brain region. DNA microarray technology and blood genomic profiling in human stroke provided tools to investigate the expression of thousands of genes. Critical comparison of gene expression profiles after stroke in humans with those in animal models should lead to a better understanding of the pathophysiology of brain ischaemia. Probably the most important part of early recovery after stroke is limited capacity of penumbra/infarct neurones to recover. It became more clear in the last years, that penumbra is not just passively dying over time but it is also actively recovering. This initial plasticity in majority contributes towards later neurogenesis, angiogenesis and final recovery. Penumbra is a principal target in acute phase of stroke. Thus, the origin of newly formed vessels and the pathogenic role of neovascularization and neurogenesis are important unresolved issues in our understanding of the mechanisms after stroke. Biomaterials for promoting brain protection, repair and regeneration are new hot target. Recently developed biomaterials can enable and increase the target delivery of drugs or therapeutic proteins to the brain, allow cell or tissue transplants to be effectively delivered to the brain and help to rebuild damaged circuits. These new approaches are gaining clear importance because nanotechnology allows better control over material-cell interactions that induce specific developmental processes and cellular responses including differentiation, migration and outgrowth.


Neurology | 1996

Relevance of early seizures for in-hospital mortality in acute cerebrovascular disease

Adrià Arboix; E. Comes; J. Massons; L. Garcia; M. Oliveres

Background: We studied the influence of early poststroke seizures (within the first 48 hours of onset of a first stroke or transient ischemic attack) on in-hospital mortality in 1,099 consecutive patients collected in a prospective stroke registry. Methods: Differences in the frequency of demographic characteristics, clinical events, and outcome between patients with and those without epileptic seizures were assessed. To determine the independent predictive value of early seizures on in-hospital mortality, variables related to vital status at discharge (alive, dead) in the univariate analysis, plus age, were studied in two multiple linear regression models. The first predictive model was based on demographic, anamnestic, and clinical variables with a total of 13 variables, and the second model was based on clinical and neuroimaging variables with a total of 16 variables. Results: A total of 27 patients (2.5%) had epileptic seizures during the first 48 hours of stroke. Advanced age, confusional syndrome, hemorrhagic stroke, large lesions, involvement of parietal and temporal lobes, and occurrence of neurologic and medical complications were significantly more frequent in seizure patients than in nonseizure patients. Overall in-hospital mortality rate was 33.3% in the seizure group and 14.2% in the nonseizure group (p = 0.02). The presence of early seizures was a significant predictive variable both in the model based on clinical variables (odds ratio [OR], 5.5; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.81 to 16.72) and in the model based on clinical and neuroimaging variables (OR, 6.1; 95% CI, 2.13 to 17.93). Conclusions: Seizures at the onset of a first-ever stroke is an independent prognostic factor for in-hospital mortality. Patients with the highest risk of developing epileptic seizures-aged persons with a large hemorrhagic infarction of a parietal lobe-may be candidates to be treated prophylactically against seizures for a few days. NEUROLOGY 1996;47: 1429-1435


Neurology | 2009

Microstructural white matter changes in metabolic syndrome A diffusion tensor imaging study

Bàrbara Segura; María Ángeles Jurado; Núria Freixenet; Carlos Falcón; Carme Junqué; Adrià Arboix

Background: Although metabolic syndrome is associated with cardiovascular disease and stroke, limited information is available on specific brain damage in patients with this syndrome. We investigated the relationship of the syndrome with white matter (WM) alteration using a voxel-based approach with diffusion tensor imaging (DTI). Methods: We compared fractional anisotropy (FA) and apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC) measurements of DTI in 19 patients with metabolic syndrome aged between 50 and 80 years and 19 age-matched controls without any vascular risk factors for the syndrome. Results: Patients with metabolic syndrome showed an anterior–posterior pattern of deterioration in WM with reduced FA and increased ADC values compared with controls. WM changes were not related to any isolated vascular risk factor. Conclusion: Although the mechanism of this damage is not clear, the results indicate microstructural white matter alterations in patients with metabolic syndrome, mainly involving the frontal lobe.


European Neurology | 2001

Acute Cerebrovascular Disease in Women

Adrià Arboix; Montserrat Oliveres; Luis García-Eroles; Clara Maragall; Juan Massons; Cecilia Targa

In 2,000 consecutive stroke patients collected in a prospective hospital-based stroke registry over a 10-year period, we assessed whether stroke in men and women was different in respect to vascular risk factors, clinical features and natural history. The frequency of the different variable in men and women was analyzed by means of univariate analysis and logistic regression models. Women accounted for 48% of the study population (n = 967) and were older than men (mean age 75 vs. 69 years, p < 0.001). In the age group of 85 years or older, stroke was more frequent in women than in men (69.8 vs. 30.2%, p < 0.001). Women showed a higher frequency of cardioembolic infarction and a lower occurrence of lacunar infarction and stroke of undetermined cause than men. In-hospital mortality (17.4 vs. 13.3%) and length of hospital stay (19.6 vs. 16.7 days) was significantly higher (p < 0.001) in women than in men. In the model based on demographic variables and cardiovascular risk factors, obesity, heart failure, atrial fibrillation and age were significant predictors of stroke in women, while intermittent claudication, ischemic heart disease, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, cigarette smoking and alcohol abuse were predictors in male sex. Hypertension and limb weakness were predictors for stroke in women, and absence of neurological deficit at hospital discharge, lacunar syndrome and ataxia were predictors in men in the models based on all variables. Women differ from men in the distribution of risk factors and stroke subtype, stroke severity and outcome. Differences in stroke pathology and/or differences in functional anatomy or plasticity of the brain between sexes may account for these findings.


BMC Neurology | 2005

Cerebral infarction in diabetes: Clinical pattern, stroke subtypes, and predictors of in-hospital mortality

Adrià Arboix; Antoni Rivas; Luis García-Eroles; Lourdes de Marcos; Joan Massons; Montserrat Oliveres

BackgroundTo compare the characteristics and prognostic features of ischemic stroke in patients with diabetes and without diabetes, and to determine the independent predictors of in-hospital mortality in people with diabetes and ischemic stroke.MethodsDiabetes was diagnosed in 393 (21.3%) of 1,840 consecutive patients with cerebral infarction included in a prospective stroke registry over a 12-year period. Demographic characteristics, cardiovascular risk factors, clinical events, stroke subtypes, neuroimaging data, and outcome in ischemic stroke patients with and without diabetes were compared. Predictors of in-hospital mortality in diabetic patients with ischemic stroke were assessed by multivariate analysis.ResultsPeople with diabetes compared to people without diabetes presented more frequently atherothrombotic stroke (41.2% vs 27%) and lacunar infarction (35.1% vs 23.9%) (P < 0.01). The in-hospital mortality in ischemic stroke patients with diabetes was 12.5% and 14.6% in those without (P = NS). Ischemic heart disease, hyperlipidemia, subacute onset, 85 years old or more, atherothrombotic and lacunar infarcts, and thalamic topography were independently associated with ischemic stroke in patients with diabetes, whereas predictors of in-hospital mortality included the patients age, decreased consciousness, chronic nephropathy, congestive heart failure and atrial fibrillationConclusionIschemic stroke in people with diabetes showed a different clinical pattern from those without diabetes, with atherothrombotic stroke and lacunar infarcts being more frequent. Clinical factors indicative of the severity of ischemic stroke available at onset have a predominant influence upon in-hospital mortality and may help clinicians to assess prognosis more accurately.


Cerebrovascular Diseases | 2008

Trends in Risk Factors, Stroke Subtypes and Outcome

Adrià Arboix; Victòria Cendrós; Marta Besa; Luis García-Eroles; Montserrat Oliveres; Cecilia Targa; Emili Comes; Joan Massons

Background: Prospective stroke registries allow analyzing important aspects of the natural history of acute cerebrovascular events. Using the Sagrat Cor Hospital of Barcelona Stroke Registry, we aimed to determine trends in risk factors, stroke subtypes, prognosis and in-hospital mortality over 19 years in hospitalized stroke patients. Methods: The study population consisted of 2,416 first-ever stroke patients (ischemic stroke, n = 2,028; intracerebral hemorrhage, n = 334) included in the stroke registry up to December 31, 2004. Temporal trends in stroke patient characteristics for the periods 1986–1992, 1993–1998 and 1999–2004 were assessed. Results: Age was significantly different among the analyzed periods (p < 0.001), showing an increment in older patients throughout time. Hypertension (p = 0.001), diabetes (p = 0.004), ischemic heart disease (p = 0.002) and atrial fibrillation increased (p = 0.000) as opposed to heavy smoking (p = 0.000) and history of TIA (p = 0.025). The mortality rate and the length of hospital stay decreased (p = 0.001), whereas transfer to convalescent/rehabilitation units increased (p = 0.001). Conclusions: An improvement in acute-stroke management and possibly evolution of cerebrovascular risk factors is reflected by changes in the risk factors and outcome of first-ever stroke patients admitted to a stroke unit over a 19-year time span.


European Neurology | 2003

Prognostic Value of Very Early Seizures for In-Hospital Mortality in Atherothrombotic Infarction

Adrià Arboix; Emili Comes; Luis García-Eroles; Juan Massons; Montserrat Oliveres

We studied the influence of very early seizures (within 48 h of stroke onset) on in-hospital mortality in a cohort of 452 consecutive patients with atherothrombotic infarction. These patients were selected from 2,000 consecutive acute stroke patients registered in a prospective hospital-based stroke registry in Barcelona, Spain. A comparison of data between the nonseizure (n = 442) and seizure (n = 10) groups was made. Predictors of very early seizures were assessed by multivariate analysis. The in-hospital mortality rate was significantly higher in atherothrombotic stroke patients with very early seizures than in those without seizures (70 vs. 19.5%, p < 0.001). Independent predictors of in-hospital mortality included very early seizures, congestive heart failure, atrial fibrillation, 85 years of age or older, altered consciousness, dizziness, parietal and pons involvement, and respiratory and cardiac complications. After multivariate analysis, atherothrombotic infarction of occipital topography and decreased consciousness appeared to be independent predictors of atherothrombotic stroke with very early seizures. Very early seizures constitute an important risk factor for in-hospital mortality after atherothrombotic stroke.


Journal of the American Geriatrics Society | 2002

Clinical Features and Functional Outcome of Intracerebral Hemorrhage in Patients Aged 85 and Older

Adrià Arboix; A. Vall‐Llosera; Lluís García-Eroles; Joan Massons; Montserrat Oliveres; Cecilia Targa

The importance of studies of older stroke victims is growing because of the changes in the age structure of Western populations. We determined demographic characteristics, clinical features, neuroimaging data, and outcome of acute spontaneous intracerebral hemorrhage occurring in people aged 85 and older.

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Joan Massons

University of Barcelona

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Luis García-Eroles

Autonomous University of Barcelona

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Emili Comes

University of Barcelona

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Juan Massons

University of Barcelona

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Olga Parra

University of Barcelona

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