Lancet neurology
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Review
Neuroinflammation in intracerebral haemorrhage: immunotherapies with potential for translation.
Intracerebral haemorrhage is inadequately controlled by current treatments, requiring new solutions to improve the prognosis. Following the primary injury, a proinflammatory cascade in the perihaematomal region, composed of activated resident microglia and astrocytes and infiltrated leucocytes, propagates neural cell death. ⋯ Potential strategies include controlling excessive harmful neuroinflammation with minocycline, sphingosine-1-phosphate receptor modulators, and statins after a brain haemorrhage. The quick initiation of these drugs, particularly in high systemic doses, could be key to counteracting the evolving secondary injury in people with intracerebral haemorrhage and provides a promising way in which the poor prognosis of intracerebral haemorrhage might one day be counteracted.