Patients with acute TIA were prospectively enrolled at 4 stroke centers. A CSE was defined using the Causative Classification of Stroke system; patent foramen ovale was considered a relevant CSE only if the patient underwent closure or was placed on anticoagulation. Patients with a known CSE at time of admission were excluded from analysis of the yield of echocardiography.
A total of 869 patients were enrolled at stroke centers, and 129 had a known CSE at presentation. Of the 740 remaining patients, 603 (81%) underwent echocardiography. A potential CSE was identified in 60 (10%) of these patients. The most common CSEs noted on echocardiography were complex aortic arch atherosclerosis and patent foramen ovale. History of coronary artery disease (P < .001), lack of prior stroke or TIA (P = .007), and presence of acute infarction on magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) (P < .001) were predictors of CSE on echocardiography. The yield of echocardiography was 29% in patients with both history of coronary artery disease and acute infarction on MRI, 14% with one of these features, and 5% with neither of these features (P < .0001). A CSE identified by echocardiography prompted initiation of anticoagulation in 15 of the 603 (2.5%) subjects.
Echocardiography demonstrates a relevant CSE in a significant portion of patients with TIA. However, changes in antithrombotic therapy resulting from echocardiography are infrequent.