Pediatric stroke: Current developments
Pediatric stroke: Current developments
PURPOSE OF REVIEW: Pediatric arterial ischemic stroke is relatively rare but carries a considerable impact and high risk of recurrence - especially in patients with sickle cell disease and various forms of vasculopathy. We will discuss risk factors, vascular physiology, and primary/secondary/rehabilitative therapies. Goals for future investigation and treatment are suggested. RECENT FINDINGS: Risk factors include chronic disease, vasculopathy, acute illness, cardiac disease, head and neck trauma, infection, and prothrombic disorders. Research has begun to implicate genetic risk factors - initially in sickle cell disease and more recently in prothrombotic disorders, moyamoya, and nitric oxide regulation. The vascular physiology of pediatric arterial ischemic stroke, especially sickle cell disease stroke, is currently undergoing study in animal models and in humans. No primary prevention therapy for pediatric arterial ischemic stroke is known. Various primary and secondary prevention therapies are used, however, in at-risk sickle cell disease patients. Aspirin, coumadin, and heparin are often initiated as secondary prevention therapies for non-sickle cell disease-associated arterial ischemic stroke, but no studies have assessed efficacy. SUMMARY: Pediatric arterial ischemic stroke is under-recognized and under-studied. Investigation into the hemodynamic aspects of arterial ischemic stroke, although best studied thus far in sickle cell disease, has been neglected. It is likely that enhanced study of hemodynamics and autoregulation will elucidate both new prevention opportunities and novel treatments.
Arterial ischemic stroke, Pediatrics, Prevention, Risk factors, Therapy
657-662
Seidman, Carly
616ae793-3257-4cf0-9b01-590f5d4c42b2
Kirkham, Fenella
1dfbc0d5-aebe-4439-9fb2-dac6503bcd58
Pavlakis, Steven
699873a7-5dc0-43b7-8d8a-b83e0253cbf8
December 2007
Seidman, Carly
616ae793-3257-4cf0-9b01-590f5d4c42b2
Kirkham, Fenella
1dfbc0d5-aebe-4439-9fb2-dac6503bcd58
Pavlakis, Steven
699873a7-5dc0-43b7-8d8a-b83e0253cbf8
Seidman, Carly, Kirkham, Fenella and Pavlakis, Steven
(2007)
Pediatric stroke: Current developments.
Current Opinion in Pediatrics, 19 (6), .
(doi:10.1097/MOP.0b013e3282f1883b).
Abstract
PURPOSE OF REVIEW: Pediatric arterial ischemic stroke is relatively rare but carries a considerable impact and high risk of recurrence - especially in patients with sickle cell disease and various forms of vasculopathy. We will discuss risk factors, vascular physiology, and primary/secondary/rehabilitative therapies. Goals for future investigation and treatment are suggested. RECENT FINDINGS: Risk factors include chronic disease, vasculopathy, acute illness, cardiac disease, head and neck trauma, infection, and prothrombic disorders. Research has begun to implicate genetic risk factors - initially in sickle cell disease and more recently in prothrombotic disorders, moyamoya, and nitric oxide regulation. The vascular physiology of pediatric arterial ischemic stroke, especially sickle cell disease stroke, is currently undergoing study in animal models and in humans. No primary prevention therapy for pediatric arterial ischemic stroke is known. Various primary and secondary prevention therapies are used, however, in at-risk sickle cell disease patients. Aspirin, coumadin, and heparin are often initiated as secondary prevention therapies for non-sickle cell disease-associated arterial ischemic stroke, but no studies have assessed efficacy. SUMMARY: Pediatric arterial ischemic stroke is under-recognized and under-studied. Investigation into the hemodynamic aspects of arterial ischemic stroke, although best studied thus far in sickle cell disease, has been neglected. It is likely that enhanced study of hemodynamics and autoregulation will elucidate both new prevention opportunities and novel treatments.
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Published date: December 2007
Keywords:
Arterial ischemic stroke, Pediatrics, Prevention, Risk factors, Therapy
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Local EPrints ID: 429368
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/429368
ISSN: 1040-8703
PURE UUID: 5b408d80-69ea-4c6b-a17a-de5081095dde
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Date deposited: 26 Mar 2019 17:30
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 03:22
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Author:
Carly Seidman
Author:
Steven Pavlakis
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