Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0020538 (
hypertension
)
170,190
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Young adults are a key part of any society and the psychosocial and economic burden of any chronic or devastating disease in this particular group has significant consequences and impacts negatively on the development of the society as a whole. Although stroke in this age group is relatively rare, its consequences, in terms of lifelong dependence and disability, are substantial. Therefore, it is important to address this issue. In this retrospective epidemiological study, we analyzed the medical records of young patients (aged 18- 45 years) with a diagnosis of stroke during the study period (January 2014 - February 2018). The study population numbered 85 patients, and a male predominance was observed (67:18).
Hypertension
was the commonest risk factor, present in 43 (50.6%), followed by dyslipidemia and diabetes mellitus, present in 37 (43.5%) and 30 (35.3%) respectively. Lacunar infarction (LI) was the commonest type of stroke, observed in 30.6%, followed by cardioembolic stroke (20%). Of the other determined causes, Sickle cell disease was the most frequent etiology. Undetermined causes were less frequent in our study (15.6%) and the presence of multiple etiologies was the main reason for classifying patients in this group. Sickle cell disease was more common than arterial dissection in our study. In our cohort of patients, stroke risk factors and classification of stroke etiologies according to the Trial of Org 10172 in
Acute Stroke
(TOAST) criteria were found to be in accordance with the current literature. Slight discrepancies were observed in gender distribution and etiologies compared with other studies from Saudi Arabia and international studies, and these need to be examined further through prospective studies.
...
PMID:Risk factors and subtypes of ischemic stroke in young patients: an observational study from a teaching hospital in Saudi Arabia. 3155 87
Microbleeds are a marker of cerebrovascular disease however its role in incident post-stroke dementia (PSD) remains unclear. We investigated whether microbleeds are associated with incident PSD, domain-specific cognitive impairment and cognitive decline over a 2-year follow-up; and whether microbleeds interact with acute stroke-related infarcts to synergistically affect cognitive outcomes. In a cohort of patients with first-episode mild ischemic stroke and no pre-stroke dementia, we found patients with 3 or more mixed microbleeds (presence of both lobar and deep) were 4 times more at risk of developing PSD compared to patients with no microbleeds. Patients with strictly lobar microbleeds were 10 times more at risk of developing memory impairment while patients with possible CAA-related microbleeds were 8 times more at risk of developing memory impairment compared to patients with no microbleeds. Microbleeds did not predict cognitive decline at the 2-year follow-up.
Acute stroke
infarcts were not related to any cognitive outcomes. Microbleeds did not interact with stroke infracts to synergistically affect cognitive outcomes. Our findings suggest that the combined effect of possible CAA and
hypertension
-related microbleeds play a large and direct role in incident PSD. Management of vasculopathy and amyloid deposition may positively impact cognitive outcomes after stroke.
...
PMID:The role of cerebral microbleeds in the incidence of post-stroke dementia. 3208 71
<< Previous
1
2
3
4
5