Introduction: Moyamoya arteriopathy, which can be idiopathic or associated with sickle cell disease, neurofibromatosis, Down syndrome, or cranial radiation therapy, is a progressive cerebral arteriopathy associated with high rates of incident and recurrent stroke. Little is known about how these subgroups differ with respect to clinical presentation, radiographic findings, stroke risk, and functional outcomes. Methods: Using ICD codes, we identified children ages 28 days to 18 years treated for moyamoya arteriopathy at our tertiary care center between 2003 and 2019. Demographic, clinical, and radiographic data were extracted from the medical record. The Pediatric Stroke Recurrence and Recovery Questionnaire was administered to consenting participants. Results: Sixty-nine patients met inclusion criteria (33 idiopathic, 18 sickle cell disease, 11 neurofibromatosis, 6 Down syndrome, 1 cranial radiation therapy). Median follow-up time was 7.7 years; 24 patients had at least 5 years of follow-up data. Frequency of stroke at presentation differed by subgroup ( P < .001). Of patients with at least 2 years of follow-up, 33 (55%) experienced stroke. The proportion of patients experiencing stroke differed by subgroup (50% of idiopathic cases, 72% of sickle cell disease, 11% of neurofibromatosis, and 100% of Down syndrome, P = .003). The frequency of bilateral versus unilateral disease ( P = .001) and stroke-free survival following presentation ( P = .01) also differed by subgroup. Conclusions: In this single-center cohort, moyamoya subgroups differed with respect to clinical and radiographic characteristics, with neurofibromatosis-associated moyamoya syndrome having a milder phenotype and Down syndrome–associated moyamoya portending a more aggressive course. These findings need confirmation in a larger, multi-center cohort with longer duration of follow-up.
Background: Childhood stroke is rare, and diagnosis is frequently delayed. The use of pediatric stroke teams has the potential to decrease time to neurology evaluation and imaging, hastening appropriate diagnosis and treatment for acute neurologic presentations in children. Methods: We performed a retrospective analysis of our institutional pediatric stroke or “brain attack” team (pedsBAT) activations from October 2014 to July 2017. Clinical characteristics and timing parameters were compared between pedsBAT activations in the inpatient vs emergency department (ED) / outpatient settings as well as between pediatric and adult BAT activations in the same time period. Results: We identified 120 pedsBAT activations (75% in the ED/outpatient setting) during the study time period. Inpatient pedsBAT activations were more likely than outpatient activations to have heart disease as a risk factor for ischemic stroke and presented more frequently with altered mental status, but there were no differences in the proportion of cerebrovascular diagnoses or timing parameters between the 2 groups. When compared with adult BAT activations, outpatient pedsBAT activations had a longer time from symptom discovery to arrival at the ED, and inpatient pedsBAT activations had longer time from symptom discovery to BAT activation. Conclusions: Compared with adults, the interval leading up to stroke team activation was longer in children, suggesting delays in symptom recognition. Future interventions should be aimed at reducing these delays in presentation to care and stroke alert activation in pediatric patients.
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