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Therapy in cerebrovascular disease: current status and future directions

 

作者: Geoffrey A Donnan,  

 

期刊: Medical Journal of Australia  (WILEY Available online 1991)
卷期: Volume 155, issue 8  

页码: 563-571

 

ISSN:0025-729X

 

年代: 1991

 

DOI:10.5694/j.1326-5377.1991.tb93899.x

 

出版商: Wiley

 

数据来源: WILEY

 

摘要:

Objective:To assess the current status and future directions of therapy in cerebrovascular disease.Datasources: English language literature search using MEDLINE, Index Medicus, reviews, texts and relevant papers.Study selection:Information has been drawn from approximately 200 articles.Data extraction and synthesis:Those articles with most relevance to current practice and future directions in the therapy of cerebrovascular disease have been cited.Conclusions:Much progress has been made over the last 30 years in the therapy of primary and secondary prevention of cerebrovascular disease. The introduction of antihypertensive agents has been largely responsible for the decline in mortality from stroke and, in some areas, the incidence. Anticoagulants such as warfarin protect against ischaemic stroke in patients with mitral or aortic valve disease and/or atrial fibrillation. Antiplatelet agents are clearly effective in the secondary prevention of ischaemic stroke after transient ischaemic attacks; the risk of stroke or death is reduced, on average, by 22%. In patients with subarachnoid haemorrhage, ischaemic complications caused by vasospasm are reduced by calcium channel blockers.A new wave of therapies is now on the horizon to minimise tissue damage in the early stages of ischaemic stroke (“tissue rescue”) with the introduction of thrombolytic agents, calcium channel blockers, NMDA antagonists and haemodilution techniques and many of these are currently being subjected to clinical trial. If they prove to be effective, our current management of acute ischaemic stroke may alter dramatically.

 

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