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Study Says
Study finds Little Strokes Lead to Big Strokes in a Week
Mini-strokes lead to a major stroke within a week in one out of 20 people and
should be treated as a medical emergency, British doctors recently found out.
They said people who were immediately treated for the small strokes, called
transient ischemic attacks, or TIAs, had almost no risk of a major stroke soon
afterward. But people who did nothing about a TIA had an 11 per cent risk of
a major stroke within a week, Dr Matthew Giles and Peter Rothwell of the Stroke
Prevention Research Unit at the University of Oxford reported. For their study,
published in the Lancet Neurology, Giles and Rothwell combined results from
18 different groups of patients, a total of more than 10,000 people. Overall,
five per cent of patients had a major stroke within seven days of a TIA, they
found. Just under one per cent of patients treated for a TIA at a specialist
neurology clinic went on to have a major stroke within a week, compared with
11 per cent of those who ignored the TIA, they found. "The risk of stroke
reported amongst patients treated urgently in specialist units was substantially
lower than risks reported among other patients treated in alternative settings,"
they wrote.
"These results support the argument that a TIA is a medical emergency and
that urgent treatment in specialist units may reduce the risk of subsequent
stroke."
More than two-thirds of major stroke survivors have some type of disability.
Reuters
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