Preventing Strokes
Two projects led by Professor Peter Rothwell, from the Department of Clinical Neurology, University of Oxford, are leading to major improvements in the effectiveness of stroke prevention.
Joe Korner, The Stroke AssociationThis work could have a huge impact on the future prevention of strokes
First, results from a series of studies of urgent prevention after a minor stroke have been used to redesign stroke-prevention services in the UK and elsewhere, and informed the Department of Health's National Stroke Strategy. Professor Rothwell and colleagues showed that the early risk of a major stroke after these more minor 'warning' events was much higher than had previously been supposed and that urgent assessment and treatment were therefore required.
Results from the study (named EXPRESS) indicated that urgent use of existing treatments (including antiplatelet drugs, blood pressure-lowering and cholesterol-lowering drugs) reduced the risk of major stroke by about 80% compared with standard treatment. This strategy is now being rolled out across the UK, with the expectation of preventing about 10,000 strokes per year and saving the NHS up to £200 million in acute care costs alone.
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