Risk factors in lacunar syndromes: a case‐control study

ABSTRACT— The association between some hypothetical risk factors (previous TIA, hypertension, ECG ischemic abnormalities, diabetes, cigarette smoking, atrial fibrillation, hypercholesterolemia, hypertriglyceridemia, high hematocrit) and lacunar syndromes has been evaluated by a matched sample case‐control study involving 108 consecutive, incident cases with lacunar syndrome and 216 hospital control subjects, matched for sex and age. A significant increase of Relative Risk (RR) has been shown for: 1. Previous history of TIA; 2. Hypertension; 3. Smoking; 4. Diabetes. No relevance was shown for: 1. Atrial fibrillation; 2. Hypercholesterolemia; 3. Hypertriglyceridemia; 4. High hematocrit. The analysis of the triplets of subjects (1 case + 2 controls) without hypertension showed a significant RR increase for: 1. Previous history of TIA; 2. Ischemic cardiac abnormalities; 3. Atrial fibrillation. Such findings support the hypothesis that, in a minority of cases with lacunar syndrome, the pathogenetic mechanism could be different from occlusion of penetrating arteries in hypertensive patients.