Medicine
Volume 36, Issue 11 , Pages 586-591, November 2008

Stroke: causes and clinical features

Hugh Markus MA BM Bch DM FRCP is Professor of Neurology at St George's University of London, UK, and Honorary Consultant Neurologist at St George's Hospital and Atkinson Morley Neuroscience Centre, London, UK. He trained in general medicine at Oxford and Nottingham and then in neurology in London. His research interests include the pathophysiology of stroke using both imaging and molecular genetic approaches. Competing interests: none declared

Abstract 

Stroke represents a clinical syndrome rather than a specific disease. It can be caused by a number of different pathologies which all result in a usually sudden-onset focal cerebral damage. This article reviews risk factors for stroke, and the different pathologies which can cause stroke. Approximately 20% of strokes are due to cerebral haemorrhage most of which is intracerebral, with a significant minority due to subarachnoid haemorrhage. The remaining 80% are due to ischaemic stroke which itself has a number of different subtypes, including large artery disease, cardioembolism, and small vessel disease. Differentiation of cerebral ischaemia from haemorrhage is impossible without brain imaging. Assessment of a patient with ischaemic stroke requires knowledge of the cerebral arterial supply and cerebral anatomy which allows one to determine which particular vascular territory (anterior versus posterior) is involved.

Keywords: brain imaging, cerebral haemorrhage, cerebral infarction, cerebrovascular disease, pathogenesis, risk factors, stroke, transient ischaemic attack

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PII: S1357-3039(08)00245-4

doi:10.1016/j.mpmed.2008.08.009

Medicine
Volume 36, Issue 11 , Pages 586-591, November 2008