The medical management of stroke |
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Authors: | PM Bath |
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Affiliation: | Department of Medicine, King's College School of Medicine & Dentistry, London, UK. |
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Abstract: | The management of stroke, so long a 'Cinderella' condition, is changing rapidly as new developments appear for acute treatment, rehabilitation and secondary prevention. Most patients with acute stroke now need rapid assessment at hospital following the onset of symptoms. Those needing admission should be managed on an acute stroke unit for stabilisation, CT scanning and other investigation, and diagnosis, and then referred, as appropriate, to a specialist stroke rehabilitation unit. Aspirin is now the recognised treatment for acute ischaemic stroke (once primary intracerebral haemorrhage has been excluded), and can be continued for secondary prevention. Attention should be paid to risk factors to prevent recurrence, especially treatment of hypertension, atrial fibrillation, and severe ipsilateral carotid stenosis. Patients with mild cerebrovascular disease should be managed in a specialist stroke/TIA clinic. Stroke is no longer an untreatable or unpreventable condition, and it is vital that hospitals design appropriate systems to manage patients in an interdisciplinary environment. |
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