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ASCO phenotyping (A: atherosclerosis; S: small-vessel disease; C: cardiac pathology; O: other causes) assigns a degree of likelihood of causal relationship to every potential disease (1 for potentially causal, 2 for causality is uncertain, 3 for unlikely causal but the disease is present, 0 for absence of disease, and 9 for insufficient workup to rule out the disease) commonly encountered in ischemic stroke describing all underlying diseases in every patient. In this new evolution of ASCO called ASCOD, we have added a 'D' for dissection, recognizing that dissection is a very frequent disease in young stroke patients. We have also simplified the system by leaving out the 'levels of diagnostic evidence', which has been integrated into grades 9 and 0. Moreover, we have also changed the cutoff for significant carotid or intracranial stenosis from 70% to more commonly used 50% luminal stenosis, and added a cardiogenic stroke pattern using neuroimaging. ASCOD captures and weights the overlap between all underlying diseases present in ischemic stroke patients.
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Amarenco et al. (Tue,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69d843f905ee2ba81dbef643 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1159/000352050
Pierre Amarenco
Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1
Julien Bogousslavsky
University of Geneva
Louis R. Caplan
University of Arkansas at Little Rock
Cerebrovascular Diseases
Inserm
Université Paris Cité
The University of Melbourne
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