Reported May 26,
2003
Deadly Stroke is Preventable
CINCINNATI (Ivanhoe Newswire)
-- A deadly stroke that occurs
in young people can be
prevented, according to new
research. Researchers say high
blood pressure medication and
lifestyle changes could help
prevent the stroke from
happening.
Subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH)
occurs when a blood vessel on
the surface of the brain
ruptures and bleeds into the
space around the brain. Unlike
other strokes, SAH usually
happens in younger populations
and is deadly about 50 percent
of the time. Researchers from
the University of Cincinnati
conducted a study to determine
what causes these strokes in
young and middle-aged adults.
The study included patients
with SAH from 44 hospitals
between 1994 and 1999. The 312
patients included in the study
were men and women between 18
and 49 years old who had not
suffered a previous stroke.
Patients answered questions
about their lifestyle and other
factors that could be related to
the development of SAH.
Researchers also included data
from 618 healthy individuals who
had not had a stroke.
Researchers say they
identified several risk factors
that put patients at risk for a
stroke. For example, stroke
patients were more than twice as
likely to have high blood
pressure than healthy
participants. Lead study author
Joseph Broderick, M.D., from the
University of Cincinnati, says:
“One of the study’s key findings
is that two-thirds of the people
who had a subarachnoid
hemorrhage in this age group
were current cigarette smokers.
That is a huge number. If you’re
a smoker in this age group, you
are 3.7-times more likely to
have this type of stroke than if
you’re not a smoker.”
Another factor that plays a
role in this type of stroke is
familial tendency. People in the
study who had SAH were about
3.8-times more likely to have a
family member who had a bleeding
stroke. Researchers say this
finding should give those with a
family history of this type of
stroke more reason to take care
of themselves.
Authors of the study conclude
SAH may be a largely preventable
disease among young and
middle-aged men and women. They
say several of the risk factors
can be modified by medications
or behavioral changes.
This article was reported by
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SOURCE: To be published in an
upcoming journal of Stroke