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SiPP (Stroke in Pregnancy and Postpartum): A prospective, observational, international, multicentre study on pathophysiological mechanisms, clinical profile, management and outcome of cerebrovascular diseases in pregnant and postpartum women

Authorized Users Only
2020
Authors
Lorenzano, Svetlana
Kremer, Cristina
Pavlović, Aleksandra
Dejana R Jovanovic
Else Charlotte Sandset
Hanne Christensen
Cheryl Bushnell
Anita Arsovska
Nikola Sprigg
Christine Roffe
Petra Ijase
Zuzana Gdovinova
Anne Alexandrov
Marialuisa Zedde
Rossana Tassi
Monica Acciaresi
Maria Lantz
Katharina Sunnerhagen
Marija Zarkov
Kirsi Rantanen
Fabienne Perren
Helle K Iversen
Christina Kruuse
Agnieszka Slowik
Article (Published version)
Metadata
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Abstract
Rationale: Cerebrovascular diseases associated with pregnancy and postpartum period are uncommon; however, they can have an important impact on health of both women and foetus or newborn. Aims: To evaluate the frequency, characteristics and management of cerebrovascular events in pregnant/postpartum women, to clarify pathophysiological mechanisms underlying the occurrence of these events including biomolecular aspects, and to assess the short- and long-term cerebrovascular and global cardiovascular outcome of these patients, their predictors and infant outcome. Methods and design: This is an observational, prospective, multicentre, international case–control study. The study will include patients with cerebrovascular events during pregnancy and/or within six months after delivery. For each included case, two controls will be prospectively recruited: one pregnant or puerperal subject without any history of cerebrovascular event and one non-pregnant or non-puerperal subject with... a recent cerebrovascular event. All controls will be matched by age, ethnicity and type of cerebrovascular event with their assigned cases. The pregnant controls will be matched also by pregnancy weeks/trimester. Follow-up will last 24 months for the mother and 12 months for the infant. Summary: To better understand causes and outcomes of uncommon conditions like pregnancy/postpartum-related cerebrovascular events, the development of multisite, multidisciplinary registry-based studies, such as the Stroke in Pregnancy and Postpartum study, is needed in order to collect an adequate number of patients, draw reliable conclusions and give definite recommendations on their managemen

Source:
European Stroke Journal, 2020, 5, 2, 193-203
Publisher:
  • SAGE Journals

DOI: 10.1177/2396987319893512

ISSN: 2396-9873

WoS: 000501042400001

Scopus: 2-s2.0-85077375173
[ Google Scholar ]
5
1
URI
http://rfasper.fasper.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/3284
Collections
  • Radovi istraživača / Researcher's publications
Institution/Community
rFASPER
TY  - JOUR
AU  - Lorenzano, Svetlana
AU  - Kremer, Cristina
AU  - Pavlović, Aleksandra
AU  - Dejana R Jovanovic
AU  - Else Charlotte Sandset
AU  - Hanne Christensen
AU  - Cheryl Bushnell
AU  - Anita Arsovska
AU  - Nikola Sprigg
AU  - Christine Roffe
AU  - Petra Ijase
AU  - Zuzana Gdovinova
AU  - Anne Alexandrov
AU  - Marialuisa Zedde
AU  - Rossana Tassi
AU  - Monica Acciaresi
AU  - Maria Lantz
AU  - Katharina Sunnerhagen
AU  - Marija Zarkov
AU  - Kirsi Rantanen
AU  - Fabienne Perren
AU  - Helle K Iversen
AU  - Christina Kruuse
AU  - Agnieszka Slowik
PY  - 2020
UR  - http://rfasper.fasper.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/3284
AB  - Rationale: Cerebrovascular diseases associated with pregnancy and postpartum period are uncommon; however, they
can have an important impact on health of both women and foetus or newborn.
Aims: To evaluate the frequency, characteristics and management of cerebrovascular events in pregnant/postpartum
women, to clarify pathophysiological mechanisms underlying the occurrence of these events including biomolecular
aspects, and to assess the short- and long-term cerebrovascular and global cardiovascular outcome of these patients,
their predictors and infant outcome.
Methods and design: This is an observational, prospective, multicentre, international case–control study. The study
will include patients with cerebrovascular events during pregnancy and/or within six months after delivery. For each
included case, two controls will be prospectively recruited: one pregnant or puerperal subject without any history of
cerebrovascular event and one non-pregnant or non-puerperal subject with a recent cerebrovascular event. All controls
will be matched by age, ethnicity and type of cerebrovascular event with their assigned cases. The pregnant controls
will be matched also by pregnancy weeks/trimester. Follow-up will last 24 months for the mother and 12 months for
the infant.
Summary: To better understand causes and outcomes of uncommon conditions like pregnancy/postpartum-related
cerebrovascular events, the development of multisite, multidisciplinary registry-based studies, such as the Stroke in
Pregnancy and Postpartum study, is needed in order to collect an adequate number of patients, draw reliable conclusions
and give definite recommendations on their managemen
PB  - SAGE Journals
T2  - European Stroke Journal
T1  - SiPP (Stroke in Pregnancy and Postpartum): A prospective, observational, international, multicentre study on pathophysiological mechanisms, clinical profile, management and outcome of cerebrovascular diseases in pregnant and postpartum women
EP  - 203
IS  - 2
SP  - 193
VL  - 5
DO  - 10.1177/2396987319893512
ER  - 
@article{
author = "Lorenzano, Svetlana and Kremer, Cristina and Pavlović, Aleksandra and Dejana R Jovanovic and Else Charlotte Sandset and Hanne Christensen and Cheryl Bushnell and Anita Arsovska and Nikola Sprigg and Christine Roffe and Petra Ijase and Zuzana Gdovinova and Anne Alexandrov and Marialuisa Zedde and Rossana Tassi and Monica Acciaresi and Maria Lantz and Katharina Sunnerhagen and Marija Zarkov and Kirsi Rantanen and Fabienne Perren and Helle K Iversen and Christina Kruuse and Agnieszka Slowik",
year = "2020",
abstract = "Rationale: Cerebrovascular diseases associated with pregnancy and postpartum period are uncommon; however, they
can have an important impact on health of both women and foetus or newborn.
Aims: To evaluate the frequency, characteristics and management of cerebrovascular events in pregnant/postpartum
women, to clarify pathophysiological mechanisms underlying the occurrence of these events including biomolecular
aspects, and to assess the short- and long-term cerebrovascular and global cardiovascular outcome of these patients,
their predictors and infant outcome.
Methods and design: This is an observational, prospective, multicentre, international case–control study. The study
will include patients with cerebrovascular events during pregnancy and/or within six months after delivery. For each
included case, two controls will be prospectively recruited: one pregnant or puerperal subject without any history of
cerebrovascular event and one non-pregnant or non-puerperal subject with a recent cerebrovascular event. All controls
will be matched by age, ethnicity and type of cerebrovascular event with their assigned cases. The pregnant controls
will be matched also by pregnancy weeks/trimester. Follow-up will last 24 months for the mother and 12 months for
the infant.
Summary: To better understand causes and outcomes of uncommon conditions like pregnancy/postpartum-related
cerebrovascular events, the development of multisite, multidisciplinary registry-based studies, such as the Stroke in
Pregnancy and Postpartum study, is needed in order to collect an adequate number of patients, draw reliable conclusions
and give definite recommendations on their managemen",
publisher = "SAGE Journals",
journal = "European Stroke Journal",
title = "SiPP (Stroke in Pregnancy and Postpartum): A prospective, observational, international, multicentre study on pathophysiological mechanisms, clinical profile, management and outcome of cerebrovascular diseases in pregnant and postpartum women",
pages = "203-193",
number = "2",
volume = "5",
doi = "10.1177/2396987319893512"
}
Lorenzano, S., Kremer, C., Pavlović, A., Dejana R Jovanovic, Else Charlotte Sandset, Hanne Christensen, Cheryl Bushnell, Anita Arsovska, Nikola Sprigg, Christine Roffe, Petra Ijase, Zuzana Gdovinova, Anne Alexandrov, Marialuisa Zedde, Rossana Tassi, Monica Acciaresi, Maria Lantz, Katharina Sunnerhagen, Marija Zarkov, Kirsi Rantanen, Fabienne Perren, Helle K Iversen, Christina Kruuse,& Agnieszka Slowik. (2020). SiPP (Stroke in Pregnancy and Postpartum): A prospective, observational, international, multicentre study on pathophysiological mechanisms, clinical profile, management and outcome of cerebrovascular diseases in pregnant and postpartum women. in European Stroke Journal
SAGE Journals., 5(2), 193-203.
https://doi.org/10.1177/2396987319893512
Lorenzano S, Kremer C, Pavlović A, Dejana R Jovanovic, Else Charlotte Sandset, Hanne Christensen, Cheryl Bushnell, Anita Arsovska, Nikola Sprigg, Christine Roffe, Petra Ijase, Zuzana Gdovinova, Anne Alexandrov, Marialuisa Zedde, Rossana Tassi, Monica Acciaresi, Maria Lantz, Katharina Sunnerhagen, Marija Zarkov, Kirsi Rantanen, Fabienne Perren, Helle K Iversen, Christina Kruuse, Agnieszka Slowik. SiPP (Stroke in Pregnancy and Postpartum): A prospective, observational, international, multicentre study on pathophysiological mechanisms, clinical profile, management and outcome of cerebrovascular diseases in pregnant and postpartum women. in European Stroke Journal. 2020;5(2):193-203.
doi:10.1177/2396987319893512 .
Lorenzano, Svetlana, Kremer, Cristina, Pavlović, Aleksandra, Dejana R Jovanovic, Else Charlotte Sandset, Hanne Christensen, Cheryl Bushnell, Anita Arsovska, Nikola Sprigg, Christine Roffe, Petra Ijase, Zuzana Gdovinova, Anne Alexandrov, Marialuisa Zedde, Rossana Tassi, Monica Acciaresi, Maria Lantz, Katharina Sunnerhagen, Marija Zarkov, Kirsi Rantanen, Fabienne Perren, Helle K Iversen, Christina Kruuse, Agnieszka Slowik, "SiPP (Stroke in Pregnancy and Postpartum): A prospective, observational, international, multicentre study on pathophysiological mechanisms, clinical profile, management and outcome of cerebrovascular diseases in pregnant and postpartum women" in European Stroke Journal, 5, no. 2 (2020):193-203,
https://doi.org/10.1177/2396987319893512 . .

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