Cerebrovascular diseases
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Cerebrovascular diseases · Jan 2001
Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical TrialThe effect of transdermal glyceryl trinitrate, a nitric oxide donor, on blood pressure and platelet function in acute stroke.
Hypertension is a common medical complication in acute stroke and is associated with a poor outcome. However, no large trials have assessed the effect of lowering blood pressure (BP) on outcome, and it remains unclear how BP should be managed in acute stroke. We assessed, in a double-blind randomised controlled trial, whether the nitric oxide (NO) donor glyceryl trinitrate (GTN, a known systemic and cerebral vasodilator), would lower BP and alter platelet function. ⋯ Transdermal GTN, an NO donor, lowered BP by 5-8%, a clinically significant and relevant, but not excessive, degree in patients with acute stroke. However, GTN had no effect on platelet aggregation or expression of adhesion molecules. Since NO donors increase cerebral blood flow in patients with acute ischaemic stroke, GTN may be an appropriate drug for testing the effect of lowering BP on functional outcome.
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Atherosclerosis involves structural change to the intima and media of medium- and large-sized arteries. Although an atherosclerotic plaque may remain clinically silent, it is prone to disruption, leading to local platelet activation and aggregation. Therefore, the major complication of atherosclerosis is thrombosis, with local occlusion or distal embolism - a generalized disease process known as atherothrombosis. ⋯ Besides optimal management of risk factors for atherothrombosis and carotid surgery, antiplatelet therapy is the cornerstone of vascular prevention. In secondary prevention, antiplatelet agents are effective in reducing the risk of further ischaemic events in patients with atherothrombosis. Clopidogrel, a newly licensed ADP receptor antagonist, is the only antiplatelet agent to have demonstrated its superiority versus aspirin for the reduction of major ischaemic events (myocardial infarction, ischaemic stroke, vascular death) in patients whose initial manifestation of atherothrombosis was one of the three main clinical manifestations of the disease (recent ischaemic stroke, myocardial infarction, established peripheral arterial disease).
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Cerebrovascular diseases · Jan 2001
Validity and reliability of simple questions in assessing short- and long-term outcome in Norwegian stroke patients.
The utility of simple questions for the assessment of stroke outcome in large-scale international studies has generally been approved, but their validity and reliability have not been evaluated in different cultures or at different intervals after a stroke. The study comprised 150 stroke patients who had been admitted consecutively to a stroke unit 6 weeks or 6 months earlier. Two weeks before the visit the patient received a postal questionnaire containing the simple 'dependency' question: 'In the last 2 weeks, did you require help from another person for everyday activities?' and the simple 'recovery' question: 'Do you feel that you have made a complete recovery from your stroke?'. ⋯ There was no difference in accuracy of the simple questions at 6 weeks compared with 6 months, and there was no clinically important difference between responses from patients and carers. The agreement between the responses to the questionnaire and the interview was good to moderate (kappa = 0.62 for the dependency question, and 0.55 for the recovery question). We conclude that the simple questions seem to be valid and reliable measures of stroke outcome when tested in Norwegian patients after 6 weeks or 6 months, which supports their continued use in large-scale multinational stroke studies at different intervals after stroke.
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Cerebrovascular diseases · Jan 2001
Circadian variation of stroke onset in Hong Kong Chinese: a hospital-based study.
Circadian variation of onset of transient ischaemic attack (TIA) or stroke during four 6-hourly periods starting from midnight was studied in Hong Kong Chinese patients admitted to a regional hospital between October 1996 and July 1999. The onset was classifiable into one of the 6-hourly periods in 832 of 905 patients; patients with unclassifiable onset were more likely to have lacunar infarct and less likely to have intracerebral haemorrhage (ICH). ⋯ There was no difference in the circadian variation between patients with and without prior TIA or stroke. This hospital-based study revealed a significant circadian variation of onset in different types and subtypes of stroke.
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Cerebrovascular diseases · Jan 2001
Clinical TrialAcetylsalicylic acid and microembolic events detected by transcranial Doppler in symptomatic arterial stenoses.
In patients with symptomatic carotid artery stenosis, high-intensity transient signals detected by transcranial Doppler (TCD) have been related to particulate microemboli originating at the stenotic lesion. The occurrence of these microembolic events within the Doppler spectrum should be influenced by antithrombotic agents of proven efficacy in these patients mainly by reducing cerebral embolism. ⋯ In patients with symptomatic arterial stenosis, the absence of an ASA medication is associated with the occurrence of TCD-detected microembolic events, suggesting a relation between these events and ASA-sensitive microemboli from the stenotic lesion.