[Ischemic cerebrovascular seizure: when and how should one search for a cardiac embolism source?].
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Cerebral embolism originating from the heart accounts for approximately 15 to 20% of ischemic strokes. By far the most important source for cardiac embolism is associated with atrial fibrillation; in these patients immediate anticoagulation with no further echocardiographic diagnostic is recommended. The majority of the remaining cardiac sources of embolism--they originate from the left ventricle and the valves--can be suggested by clinical signs. In these cases a documentation by echocardiography is indicated. In contrast, embolism originating from the left atrium is rare and commonly not detectable by simple clinical means. The semi-invasive transesophageal echocardiography is able to visualize atrial pathologies with a high accuracy, but this investigation should be performed routinely only in patients less than 45 years old with no evidence for cardiac disease.