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Stroke

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Stroke

NIH - Stroke “A stroke is a medical emergency. Strokes happen when blood flow to your brain stops. Within minutes, brain cells begin to die. There are two kinds of stroke. The more common kind, called ischemic stroke, is caused by a blood clot that blocks or plugs a blood vessel in the brain. The other kind, called hemorrhagic stroke, is caused by a blood vessel that breaks and bleeds into the brain. "Mini-strokes" or transient ischemic attacks (TIAs), occur when the blood supply to the brain is briefly interrupted.”

NIH - Know Stroke: Know the Signs

NIH - Know Stroke: Know the Signs, Act in Time Video

NIH – Stroke (Medical Encyclopedia) “ISCHEMIC STROKE: This is the most common type of stroke. Usually this type of stroke results from clogged arteries, a condition called atherosclerosis. Fatty deposits collect on the wall of the arteries, forming a sticky substance called plaque. Over time, the plaque builds up. Often, the plaque causes the blood to flow abnormally, which can cause the blood to clot. There are two types of clots: • A clot that stays in place in the brain is called a cerebral thrombus. • A clot that breaks loose and moves through the bloodstream to the brain is called a cerebral embolism. Another important cause of cerebral embolisms is a type of arrhythmia called atrial fibrillation. Other causes of ischemic stroke include endocarditis, an abnormal heart valve, and having a mechanical heart valve. A clot can form on a heart valve, break off, and travel to the brain. For this reason, those with mechanical or abnormal heart valves often must take blood thinners. HEMORRHAGIC STROKE: A second major cause of stroke is bleeding in the brain hemorrhagic stroke. This can occur when small blood vessels in the brain become weak and burst. Some people have defects in the blood vessels of the brain that make this more likely. The flow of blood after the blood vessel ruptures damages brain cells. STROKE RISKS: High blood pressure is the number one reason that you might have a stroke. The risk of stroke is also increased by age, family history of stroke, smoking, diabetes, high cholesterol, and heart disease. Certain medications increase the chances of clot formation, and therefore your chances for a stroke. Birth control pills can cause blood clots, especially in woman who smoke and who are older than 35. Men have more strokes than women. But, women have a risk of stroke during pregnancy and the weeks immediately after pregnancy. Cocaine use, alcohol abuse, head injury, and bleeding disorders increase the risk of bleeding into the brain. … Symptoms: The symptoms of stroke depend on what part of the brain is damaged. In some cases, a person may not even be aware that he or she has had a stroke. Usually, a SUDDEN development of one or more of the following indicates a stroke: • Weakness or paralysis of an arm, leg, side of the face, or any part of the body • Numbness, tingling, decreased sensation • Vision changes • Slurred speech, inability to speak or understand speech, difficulty reading or writing • Swallowing difficulties or drooling • Loss of memory • Vertigo (spinning sensation) • Loss of balance or coordination • Personality changes • Mood changes (depression, apathy) • Drowsiness, lethargy, or loss of consciousness • Uncontrollable eye movements or eyelid drooping If one or more of these symptoms is present for less than 24 hours, it may be a transient ischemic attack (TIA). A TIA is a temporary loss of brain function and a warning sign for a possible future stroke. … IMMEDIATE TREATMENT Thrombolytic medicine, such as tPA, breaks up blood clots and can restore blood flow to the damaged area. People who receive this medicine are more likely to have less long-term impairment. However, there are strict criteria for who can receive thrombolytics. The most important is that the person be examined and treated by a specialized stroke team within 3 hours of when the symptoms start. If the stroke is caused by bleeding rather than clotting, this treatment can make the damage worse -- so care is needed to diagnose the cause before giving treatment. In other circumstances, blood thinners such as heparin and Coumadin are used to treat strokes. Aspirin may also be used. … Prevention To help prevent a stroke: • Get screened for high blood pressure at least every 2 years, especially if you have a family history of high blood pressure. • Have your cholesterol checked. If you are high risk, your LDL "bad" cholesterol should be lower than 70 mg/dL. • If you have high blood pressure, diabetes, high cholesterol, and heart disease, make sure you follow your doctor's treatment recommendations. • Follow a low-fat diet. • Quit smoking. • Exercise regularly -- 30 minutes a day if you are not overweight; 60 - 90 minutes a day if you are overweight. • Do not drink more than 1 to 2 alcoholic drinks a day. Aspirin therapy (81mg a day or 100mg every other day) is now recommended for stroke prevention in women under 65 as long as the benefits outweigh the risks. It should be considered for women over age 65 only if their blood pressure is controlled and the benefit is greater than the risk of gastrointestinal bleeding and brain hemorrhage. Ask your doctor if aspirin is right for you. Your doctor may also recommend that you take aspirin or another blood thinner if you have had a TIA or stroke in the past, or if you currently have a heart arrhythmia (like atrial fibrillation), mechanical heart valve, congestive heart failure, or risk factors for stroke.”

NHS - Understanding stroke and TIA (UK) “There are some risk factors for stroke that cannot be changed, including: • Age You’re more likely to have a stroke if you're over the age of 65. However, about a quarter of strokes happen in younger people. • Family history If a close relative (parent, grandparent, brother or sister) has had a stroke, your risk is likely to be higher. • Ethnicity If you’re South Asian, African or Caribbean, your risk of stroke is higher, partly because rates of diabetes and high blood pressure are higher in these groups. • Your medical history If you’ve previously had a stroke, TIA or heart attack, your risk of stroke is higher. However, many of the major risk factors for stroke can be reduced by making lifestyle changes or taking the right medication. These risks include: • Hypertension (high blood pressure). This is the major, treatable risk factor for stroke. • Smoking. • High blood cholesterol. • An inactive lifestyle. • Diabetes. • Being overweight or obese. • Atrial fibrillation. • Drinking more than the recommended amounts of alcohol. Rarer risk factors are normally related to genetic problems, blood disorders, antibody abnormalities, migraine and other diseases of the heart and blood vessels. … Patients with a suspected stroke should have a scan of their brain to determine: • If the stroke has been caused by a blocked artery or a burst blood vessel. • Which part of the brain has been affected. • How severe the stroke is. The brain scan should be carried out as soon as possible after the symptoms of stroke start, so that the correct treatment can begin. The sooner treatment is started the greater the chance of survival and recovery. Minutes really do matter. There are some treatments, including aspirin, which cannot be given to patients with a haemorrhagic stroke as these may increase the damage to the brain. The brain scan is required in order to confirm the causes and type of stroke. For TIA, rapid diagnosis allows steps to be taken to reduce the risk of a second and potentially major stroke. … Stroke experts have set out standards which define good stroke care, including: • A rapid response to a 999 call for suspected stroke. • Prompt transfer to a hospital providing specialist care. • An urgent brain scan (for example, CT or MRI) undertaken as soon as possible. • Immediate access to a high quality stroke unit. • Early multidisciplinary assessment, including swallowing screening. • Stroke specialised rehabilitation. • Planned transfer of care from hospital to community and longer term support. “

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Notes

The Guidelines section will contain 2008 and some 2007 updated published guidelines. To view Guidelines from previous years, view the Guideline sections or the Article sections or our Monthly Online Newsletter (under the Guidelines section).

Stroke

Daily Treatment Report

Cognitive Therapy-CBT-Psychotherapy

Interventions for preventing depression after stroke. (Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2008)

Device Therapy

Drug Side-Effects and Interactions

Drugs

Anticoagulants for acute ischaemic stroke. (Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2008)

High-Dose Epogen/Procrit in Ischemic Stroke Patients Linked to Higher Death Rate

Thrombolysis with alteplase 3–4•5 h after acute ischaemic stroke (SITS-ISTR): an observational study (The Lancet 2008) “Alteplase remains safe when given at 3–4•5 h after ischaemic stroke, offering an opportunity for patients who cannot be treated within the standard 3-h timeframe.”

Antiplatelet therapy for acute ischaemic stroke. (Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2008) “AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: Antiplatelet therapy with aspirin 160 mg to 300 mg daily, given orally (or by nasogastric tube or per rectum in patients who cannot swallow), and started within 48 hours of onset of presumed ischaemic stroke reduces the risk of early recurrent ischaemic stroke without a major risk of early haemorrhagic complications and improves long-term outcome.”

Anticoagulation in Patients with Acute Ischemic Stroke and Atrial Fibrillation-a Balance of Risks and Benefits. (Cardiovasc Drugs Ther. 2008)

Antiplatelet therapy for acute ischaemic stroke. (Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2008) “AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: Antiplatelet therapy with aspirin 160 mg to 300 mg daily, given orally (or by nasogastric tube or per rectum in patients who cannot swallow), and started within 48 hours of onset of presumed ischaemic stroke reduces the risk of early recurrent ischaemic stroke without a major risk of early haemorrhagic complications and improves long-term outcome.”

In-Hospital Stroke Treated With Intravenous Tissue Plasminogen Activator. (Stroke. 2008)

Net Benefit From tPA for Stroke Patients Receiving Prior Antiplatelet Therapy

The response to IV rt-PA in very old stroke patients (European Journal of Neurology 2008) "The rates of clinical improvement, mortality, or symptomatic CNS bleeding were also unrelated to age and sex. In conclusion, the response to IV rtPA is not impaired in elderly stroke patients and male and female are equally responsive."

Effect of aspirin and warfarin on early survival after intracerebral haemorrhage. (J Neurol. 2008)

Mannitol for Acute Stroke (Stroke. 2008) "There is currently not enough evidence to decide whether the routine use of mannitol in acute stroke would result in any beneficial or harmful effect. The routine use of mannitol in all patients with acute stroke is not supported by any evidence from randomized controlled clinical trials. Further trials are needed to confirm or refute whether the routine use of mannitol is beneficial in acute stroke."

Exercise

Exercise for intermittent claudication. (Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2008)

General Information

Stroke in elderly patients: management and prognosis in the ED. (Am J Emerg Med. 2008)

Cholesterol Drugs Lower Stroke Risk in Older People“Taking a cholesterol-lowering drug after a stroke or mini-stroke reduces an older person's risk of another stroke much as it does in younger patients, according to a U.S. study.”

No Neuroprotective Effect of Dipyridamole, Aspirin, or Telmisartan in Recurrent Stroke

Aspirin and Extended-Release Dipyridamole versus Clopidogrel for Recurrent Stroke (NEJM 2008)

Arrival method, slow response often delay stroke care “Study highlights: • In a study that analyzed data on more than 15,000 stroke patients only 23 percent arrived at the hospital within two hours of symptom onset and were suitable for evaluation to receive tPA. • Those who arrived by ambulance were more than twice as likely to receive timely CT scans as those who “walked in” on their own. • Researchers said it’s important for people to recognize the symptoms of stroke and promptly call 9-1-1. Arriving at a hospital by ambulance could lead to faster stroke diagnosis and speed treatment.”

Therapeutic interventions for prevention of recurrent ischemic stroke. (Am J Manag Care. 2008)

Folic acid deficiency increases delayed neuronal death, DNA damage, platelet endothelial cell adhesion molecule-1 immunoreactivity, and gliosis in the hippocampus after transient cerebral ischemia. (J Neurosci Res. 2008) "Our results suggest that folic acid deficiency enhances neuronal damage induced by ischemia."

Treatment Limits Bleeding Stroke Damage

Deaths Higher for Strokes Treated at Night, on Weekends "The findings, both researchers speculated, may reflect differences in the quality of care offered to stroke patients during these off-hours."

Guidelines

Canadian best practice recommendations for stroke care (updated 2008). (CMAJ. 2008)

Guidelines for Management of Ischaemic Stroke and Transient Ischaemic Attack 2008 (Cerebrovasc Dis 2008)

Immunotherapy

 

Internet Sites

Treatment Information

DrugBank (drug structure)

FDA - MedWatch (Drug Alerts)

Drug-Food-Supplement Information

Drug Information Online

Drug Interaction Checker

DrugDigest (drug interactions)

FDA - Drug Interactions: What You Should Know

NIH - Botanical Dietary Supplements: Background Information

NIH - Drug, Supplements, and Herbal Information

NIH - Herbal Supplements: Consider Safety, Too

NIH - Medicines

NIH - Vitamin and Mineral Supplement Fact Sheets

Nutrition

 

Other

Other Treatments

Experimental

Radiotherapy

 

Supplements-Vitamins-CAM

Resveratrol exerts its neuroprotective effect by modulating mitochondrial dysfunctions and associated cell death during cerebral ischemia. (Brain Res. 2008)

Oral administration of grape polyphenol extract ameliorates cerebral ischemia/reperfusion-induced neuronal damage and behavioral deficits in gerbils: comparison of pre- and post-ischemic administration. (J Nutr Biochem. 2008) “These findings indicate that oral GPE intake may confer protection against I/R injury and emphasize that early intervention may be an effective therapeutic measure for ameliorating brain injury in stroke.”

Patterns of Using Complementary and Alternative Medicine by Stroke Patients at Two University Hospitals in Korea. (Evid Based Complement Alternat Med. 2008)

Omega-3 fatty acid may guard against repeat stroke “Tanaka and colleagues say it is noteworthy that even among Japanese individuals, who have relatively high blood concentrations of EPA, "further increases in EPA concentration may lead to prevention of recurrence of stroke." The researchers note that because this trial used purified EPA instead of the fish oil used in previous studies, the preventive effects on stroke can be attributed to EPA. “

Surgery

Transplantation

 

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