Articles: stroke.
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The heart surgery forum · Jan 1999
ReviewEndarterectomy for preventing stroke in symptomatic and asymptomatic carotid stenosis. Review of clinical trials and recommendations for surgical therapy.
Multicenter, randomized trials have demonstrated advantages for surgery over medical therapy in both symptomatic and asymptomatic carotid stenosis of greater than 70%. Controversial interpretations of these trials are debated between medical and surgical camps. The goal of this review is to summarize the current state of knowledge in carotid stenosis and the role of surgery and several advances in operative management. ⋯ Randomized trials support the safety and efficacy of carotid endarterectomy for stenosis greater than 70% (with or without symptoms). Advantages of surgery over medical therapy were found in less than three years and there is ample evidence to suggest that the differences between these groups would have been even more pronounced had longer follow-up been obtained. Thus for patients who face many years of risk after diagnosis of a carotid lesion, early surgery is the most important and effective intervention for preventing stroke. The results of these trials raised initial concern over increasing health care expenditures from rising surgical case volumes. However, studies of cost effectiveness confirmed that surgery saves health care dollars when compared to the long term care of stroke victims.
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Ischemic stroke is an uncommon, but significant cause of disability in childhood. Children with strokes present with predictable deficits as adults do; however, fever and seizures at stroke onset are more common in children than in adults. ⋯ Prognosis in childhood stroke is not benign and up to 50% of pediatric stroke patients have chronic sequelae. Emerging therapies may alter prognosis in certain populations of children at risk for stroke, but more research is necessary.
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Cochrane Db Syst Rev · Apr 1996
ReviewWITHDRAWN: Antiplatelet therapy for preventing stroke in patients with nonrheumatic atrial fibrillation and a history of stroke or transient ischemic attacks.
People with nonrheumatic atrial fibrillation who have had a transient ischemic attack or minor ischemic stroke are at risk of recurrent stroke. ⋯ Aspirin may reduce the risk of vascular events in people with nonrheumatic atrial fibrillation, but the effect shown in the single trial was not statistically significant.