Treatment of stroke patients should occur in dedicated stroke units with
experienced medical, nursing and allied health staff to minimize morbidity and
mortality. Specific treatment strategies depend on the type of stroke, which is
determined by urgent brain imaging. The key treatment for ischaemic stroke, caused by
a blocked blood vessel, is to restore blood flow using clot-dissolving medicine or
minimally invasive surgery via angiogram. Both treatments are time critical as
effectiveness reduces rapidly over the first few hours after stroke onset. Specific
treatment options for intracerebral haemorrhage (bleeding into the brain) are limited,
but lowering blood pressure may have some benefit and research into minimally
invasive surgery is ongoing. In addition to lifestyle modification, prevention of further
strokes requires lowering blood pressure and, for ischaemic stroke, lowering
cholesterol and medications to reduce clotting (e.g. aspirin). Access to proven stroke
therapies is highly variable and gaps lead to unnecessary disability, death and health
costs.
Keywords: Cytoprotection, Intracerebral haemorrhage, Ischaemic stroke,
Nanoparticles, Stem cell therapy, Stroke unit, Thrombectomy, Thrombolysis,
Virtual rehabilitation.