Clinical study of 227 patients with lacunar infarcts.

Abstract
We describe an analysis of 227 patients with lacunar infarcts; 177 were inpatients and the remaining 50 were outpatients. The group comprised 11% of all inpatients with cerebrovascular pathology and 16% of all consecutive inpatients with brain infarcts studied at the Department of Neurology of the Hospital de la Santa Creu i Sant Pau [Barcelona, Spain]. The main risk factors identified in these patients were arterial hypertension in 164 (72%), diabetes mellitus in 64 (28%), and heart disease in 58 (26%). The most common clinical syndromes were pure motor hemiparesis in 125 (55%), pure hemisensory stroke in 42 (18%), the sensorimoter deficit syndrome in 34 (15%), ataxic hemiparesis in seven (3%), and the dysarthria-clumsy hand syndrome in four (2%); atypical syndromes were observed in 15 patients (7%). Lacunes were demonstrated by computed tomography in 100 patients (44%) and by magnetic resonance imaging in 35 (78%) of the 45 patients in which it was applied. Magnetic resonance imaging was significantly better (p < 0.001) than computed tomography for imaging lacunes, especially those located in either the pons (p<0.005) or the internal capsule (p<0.001). After the acute phase, mild or no neurologic disability was detected in 178 patients (78.4%), moderate disability persisted in 48 patients (21.1%), and severe disability was recorded in one case (0.4%). Lacunar infarcts are a clearly defined entity with characteristic clinical features and an excellent short-term prognosis. Magnetic resonance imaging is the current method of choice for demonstrating these small brain lesions.