Background: Although acute pancreatitis is listed among the exclusion
criteria for the administration of recombinant tissue plasminogen activator according to
the Japanese Guideline for the Management of Stroke, the co-occurrence of acute
pancreatitis and acute ischemic stroke has not been investigated. The present study aimed
to assess the incidence rate of acute pancreatitis in patients with acute ischemic
stroke.Methods: This study consecutively enrolled all patients with ischemic stroke
admitted to the Department of Neurology, JA Toride Medical Center between April 2014 and
March 2016. Diagnosis of acute pancreatitis was made according to the revised Atlanta
Classification of Acute Pancreatitis. We retrospectively analyzed serum amylase activity
and the frequency of acute pancreatitis as a comorbidity of ischemic stroke.Results: A total of 411 ischemic stroke patients were included. Serum
amylase activity was measured for 364 patients, 27 of whom presented with amylase activity
exceeding the upper limit of normal. In two patients with serum amylase activity greater
than three times-fold the upper limit of normal, computed tomography or transabdominal
ultrasonography showed no characteristic findings of acute pancreatitis. No patient in the
cohort met the diagnostic criteria for acute pancreatitis.Conclusions: Acute pancreatitis is a very rare comorbidity of acute ischemic
stroke.
A 48-year-old man had convulsions, and magnetic resonance angiography (MRA) showed diffuse constriction of the cerebral arteries. He was suspected of having primary angiitis of the central nervous system (PACNS) and treated with steroid for three days. The MRA abnormality disappeared after a week. After 69 days, he developed dizziness, and MRA revealed recurrence of cerebral artery stenosis. Nevertheless, the symptoms and abnormal MRA findings recovered promptly without treatment. He was diagnosed with reversible cerebral vasoconstriction syndrome (RCVS) without headache. This case suggests that RCVS should be a differential diagnosis in patients without headache whose MRA findings show multiple cerebral artery stenosis.
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