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What is Stroke?
A stroke,
or brain attack, is caused by the sudden loss of blood flow to the
brain or bleeding inside the head. Each can cause brain cells to
stop functioning or die. When brain cells die, the function of body
parts they control is impaired or lost, causing paralysis, speech
problems, loss of feeling, memory and reasoning deficits, coma,
and possibly death. Every year, about 700,000 people in the United
States suffer a stroke, and about 190,000 die, making it the nation's
number three killer after heart disease and cancer. It is the number
one cause of adult disability. Stroke risk increases sharply with
age, doubling every decade after the age of 55. However, stroke
can occur at any age - approximately 28 percent of the those who
have a stroke are under 65 years old.
Fortunately,
by recognizing the signs of stroke and seeking immediate medical
attention you can help reduce your chances of death and disability.
What Are The Symptoms?
Stoke
symptoms may not be as dramatic or painful as a heart attack, but
the results can be just as devastating. Stroke is an emergency.
Get medical attention immediately and know when the symptoms started.
Common symptoms include:
- Sudden numbness or weakness of
face, arm , or leg, especially on one side of the body.
- Sudden confusion, trouble speaking
or understanding speech
- Sudden trouble seeing in one or
both eyes
- Sudden trouble walking, dizziness,
loss of balance or coordination
- Sudden severe headache with no
known cause.
Jot
down the time the symptoms started. Sometimes these warning signs
occur for only a few minutes and then resolve. Even if this happens,
or if you think you are getting better, call for help.
What Causes A Brain Attack?
Ischemic
stroke is caused by an interruption of blood flow to the brain,
while hemorrhagic stroke is caused by bleeding inside the head.
The following defines the various types of stroke:
- Ischemic - blockage of brain blood
vessels, including:
1. Embolic - clots travel from the heart or neck blood vessels
and lodge in the brain
2. Lacunar - small vessels in the brain are blocked, often due
to high blood pressure or diabetes damage.
3. Thrombotic - clot forms in the brain blood vessels often due
to arteriosclerosis.
- Hemorrhagic - bleeding into or
around the brain, including:
1. Subarachnoid - weak spots on brain arteries burst and blood
covers the brain
2. Bleeding into the brain - blood vessels in the brain break
because they have been weakened by damage due to high blood pressure,
diabetes, and aging.
When
blood cannot get to brain cells, they die within minutes to a few
hours. Doctors call this area of dead cells an infarct.
The
lack of normal blood flow to brain cells sets off a chain reaction
called the "ischemic cascade." Over hours, this chain reaction endangers
brain cells ina progressively larger area of brain where blood supply
is compromised but not completely cut off. Prompt medical treatment
offers the best chance of salvaging this region of brain cells,
called the "penumbra."
What are the treatments?
Immediate
medical care is critical. New treatments work only if given within
a few hours after the onset of a stroke. For example, a clot-busting
drug recently approved by FDA must be given within three hours.
Before
treatment, the neurologist or emergency physician must carefully
examine the patient to determine the patient's condition and what
caused the stroke. Diagnostic tests to determine treatment could
include:
- Neurologic exam
- Brain imaging tests to determine
the type, location and extent of the stroke (CT and MRI scans)
- Tests that show blood flow and
bleeding site (angiography and carotid and transcranial ultrasound)
- Blood tests for bleeding or clotting
disorder
- EKG or an ultrasound examination
of the heart (echocardiogram) to identify cardiac sources of blood
clots that can travel to the brain
- Tests that gauge impairments on
a functional scale.
Once
the doctor completes these tests, the treatment is selected. For
all stroke patients, the aim is to prevent further brain damage.
If the stroke is caused by blockage of blood flow to the brain,
treatment could include:
- Drugs that thin the blood, including
antiocoagulants (coumadin) and antiplatelet medications (aspirins
or ticlopidine)
- Drugs that break up clots (thrombolytics)
- Surgery that cleans the insides
of blood vessels (endarterectomy)
- Drugs that stop the chain reaction
of dmage from the ischemic cascade (neuroprotective agents, promising
but sill experimental)
- Procedures which dilate blocked
blood vessels.
If the
stroke is caused by bleeding, treatment could include:
- Drugs that maintain normal blood
clotting
- Surgery to remove blood in the
brain or decrease pressure on the brain
- Surgery to fix the broken blood
vessels
- Blocking off bleeding vessels with
a balloon or coil
- Drugs that prevent or reverse brain
swelling.
After
having a stroke, many people will be left with some disability.
The disability depends on the size and location of the stroke. The
right side of the brain controls the left side of the body and in
right-handed individuals it is important for attention and visual-spatial
skills. The left side of the brain controls the right side of the
body and in right-handed individuals ( and 50 percent of left-handed
individuals) controls language-speaking and understanding. Language
disorders are also called "aphasias".
Rehabilitation
helps restore functions lost from damage due to stroke. During rehabilitation,
most patients will improve to some degree, but many do not recover
completely. Unlike skin cells, brain cells that die do not recover
and are not replaced by new cells. However, the human brain is adaptable
and patients can learn new ways of functioning, using other, undamaged
brain cells. This stage is often a challenge as the patient and
family work as part of the medical team.
A stroke
patient's rehabilitation team may include physical, occupational,
and speech therapists; nurses; and doctors. Most of the improvement
will take place in the first three to six months of the rehabilitation
process, but some patients can make excellent progress over longer
periods of time.
How is stroke prevented?
Some
risk factors - age, sex, race and a history of stoke in the family
- cannot be changes, but others can be controlled. Most controllable
risk factors relate to the health of the heart and blood vessels.
The following can help prevent stroke:
- Regular medical check-ups
- Controlling high blood pressure
- Don't smoke - if you do smoke,
stop
- Treating heart disease, especially
an irregular heat beat called atrial fibrillation (AF)
- Improving diet: Avoid excess fat,
salt, and alcohol
- Exervising
- Controlling diabetes
- Seeking immediate medical attention
for warning signs of stroke
Progress through research
A massive
effort is underway through the world, involving thousands of scientists
studying all aspects of stroke: genetic factors; new diagnostic
tools to detect early stroke; drugs and techniques to prevent or
reduce stroke; drugs to improve stroke recover; new ways of opening
blocked blood vessels; and improved methods in prevention and rehabilitation.
To date, the most significant progress has been increased understanding
and prevention of the causes of stroke and improved emergency care
of stroke patients. Much of this progress and all new treatments
have come from studies using animal models of stroke.
Continued research is needed and should
improve prevention and survival of stroke.
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