Journal of the American Heart Association, Volume 15, Issue 6 , March 17, 2026. BackgroundThe mechanisms underlying covert versus symptomatic acute infarcts in cerebral small vessel disease are unclear.MethodsBased on the multicenter Cerebral Small Vessel Disease Disability and Outcome Cohort Study, we consecutively enrolled patients presenting with an acute lacunar stroke within 30 days or patients without acute stroke symptoms but with moderate to severe white matter hyperintensities.
Between August 2016 and June 2019, 1710 patients (mean age 61.87±11.28 years, 37.25% female) were recruited across 30 hospitals in China. We compared the clinical and imaging characteristics between individuals with incidental diffusion‐weighted imaging (DWI)‐positive lesions and those with recent small subcortical infarcts (RSSI).ResultsThe prevalence of incidental DWI‐positive lesions and RSSI was 2.28% and 31.64%.
Patients with incidental DWI‐positive lesions were older, had lower blood pressure and lipid levels, and more prior lacunar stroke. Incidental DWI‐positive lesions were typically smaller and round/ovoid, more often involved the subcortical white matter and cerebral cortex.
RSSI more frequently affected perforating artery territories, 39.9% of RSSI cases were consistent with branch atheromatous disease.
Journal of the American Heart Association published a clinical update in Cardiology on 04 Mar 2026.
The item focuses on Different Characteristics of Incidental Diffusion‐Weighted Imaging‐Positive Lesions and Recent Small Subcortical Infarct in Patients With Cerebral Small Vessel Disease.
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