| Literature DB >> 30114967 |
Cheryl D Bushnell1, Seemant Chaturvedi2, Kathy R Gage3, Paco S Herson4, Patricia D Hurn5, Monik C Jiménez6, Steven J Kittner7, Tracy E Madsen8, Louise D McCullough9, Mollie McDermott10, Mathew J Reeves11, Tatjana Rundek2.
Abstract
Biologic sex influences many variables that are important to brain health in general, and to stroke or cerebral ischemia in particular, such as general health status, cerebrovascular anatomy and function, unique risk factors such as pregnancy and preeclampsia, symptomatology, and therapeutic response. A more complete understanding of the scale and depth of sexual dimorphism in the brain and the role of more general sex-based factors is crucial to reducing the burden of stroke in women and men. This focused review highlights recent findings in stroke, including sex differences in epidemiology, risk factor reduction, comparative use of stroke therapeutics in both sexes, the importance of frailty in women, and the biologic basis for sex differences in stroke. Such findings show tremendous promise for the future of personalized medicine in stroke prevention and treatment.Entities:
Keywords: Sex; sex differences; stroke; women
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30114967 PMCID: PMC6282222 DOI: 10.1177/0271678X18793324
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Cereb Blood Flow Metab ISSN: 0271-678X Impact factor: 6.200