| Literature DB >> 30425946 |
Abstract
There have been recent advances in stroke prevention in nutrition, blood pressure control, antiplatelet therapy, anticoagulation, identification of high-risk asymptomatic carotid stenosis, and percutaneous closure of patent foramen ovale. There is evidence that the Mediterranean diet significantly reduces the risk of stroke and that B vitamins lower homocysteine, thus preventing stroke. The benefit of B vitamins to lower homocysteine was masked by harm from cyanocobalamin among study participants with impaired renal function; we should be using methylcobalamin instead of cyanocobalamin. Blood pressure control can be markedly improved by individualized therapy based on phenotyping by plasma renin and aldosterone. Loss of function mutations of CYP2D19 impair activation of clopidogrel and limits its efficacy; ticagrelor can avoid this problem. New oral anticoagulants that are not significantly more likely than aspirin to cause severe bleeding, and prolonged monitoring for atrial fibrillation (AF), have revolutionized the prevention of cardioembolic stroke. Most patients (~90%) with asymptomatic carotid stenosis are better treated with intensive medical therapy; the few that could benefit from stenting or endarterectomy can be identified by a number of approaches, the best validated of which is transcranial Doppler (TCD) embolus detection. Percutaneous closure of patent foramen ovale has been shown to be efficacious but should only be implemented in selected patients; they can be identified by clinical clues to paradoxical embolism and by TCD estimation of shunt grade. "Treating arteries instead of treating risk factors," and recent findings related to the intestinal microbiome and atherosclerosis point the way to promising advances in future.Entities:
Keywords: anticoagulant; antiplatelet; carotid stenosis; hypertension; nutrition; patent foramen ovale; stroke prevention
Year: 2018 PMID: 30425946 PMCID: PMC6231304 DOI: 10.2478/jtim-2018-0024
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Transl Int Med ISSN: 2224-4018
Dietary recommendations for patients at risk of stroke
| • No egg yolks: use egg whites or substitutes such as Egg Beaters®, Egg Creations® |
| • Flesh of any animal: one palm size portion or less, approximately every other day (or half that daily) |
| • Seldom red meat, mainly fish and chicken |
| • High intake of olive oil, Canola oil |
| • Only whole grains |
| • High intake of vegetables, fruit, legumes |
| • Avoid deep fried foods, hydrogenated oils (trans fats) |
| • Avoid sugar and refined grains, and limit potatoes |
To accomplish this, patients need to think of their meatless day not as a punishment day but as a gourmet cooking class day: “Having fun learning how to make healthy eating tasty.”[57] (Reproduced by permission of BMJ from: Spence JD. Diet for stroke prevention. Stroke and Vascular Neurology 2018;0:e000130. doi:10.1136/svn-2017-000130)
Summary of the evidence supporting B vitamins for stroke prevention
| VISP[10] including all patients showed no benefit, nor did NORVIT[58]—both older populations with poorer renal function than in later major trials, receiving cyanocobalamin. In NORVIT, there was an increased risk of stroke among persons receiving cyanocobalamin. |
| In HOPE-2[59] (younger healthier population with better renal function than in NORVIT and VISP), B vitamins reduced the risk of stroke by 23%. |
| In SuFolOM3[60] (younger participants than in the other trials, with the best renal function of the studies and only 20 |
| In the VISP subgroup analysis[61] excluding patients with eGFR <46.18 and those who got B12 shots, a 34% reduction in the composite outcome of stroke/MI/vascular death was observed, comparing high-dose vitamin in patients with good vitamin B12 absorption |
| B vitamins including 1000 μg of cyanocobalamin were harmful in patients with diabetic nephropathy (DIVINe study),[62] accelerating decline in renal function and doubling cardiovascular events. |
| In VITATOPS, B vitamins with only 400 μg of cyanocobalamin were not beneficial in diabetics with eGFR <50 (HR = 0.88; 95% CI = 0.59,1.32; |
| Koyama’s work (increased cyanide levels in renal failure[65] and benefit of methylcobalamin not shown in the WENBIT study[66] with cyanocobalamin),[67] plus 2 plausible mechanisms for harm (thiocyanate increases LDL oxidation[68] and formation of thiocyanate consumes H2S), points to the cyanide in cyanocobalamin (or impaired decyanation of cyanocobalamin) in patients with impaired renal function as the likely problem. |
| Essentially, the null trials are explained by harm in participants with impaired renal function cancelling out the benefit among participants with good renal function.[9] |
(Reproduced by permission of Lancet Neurology from: Spence JD, Yi Q, Hankey GJ. B vitamins in stroke prevention: time to reconsider. Lancet Neurol. 2017 Sep;16(9):750-60.)
Physiologically individualized therapy based on renin/aldosterone profile
| Primary hyperaldosteronism | Liddle’s syndrome and variants (renal Na+ channel mutations) | Renal/renovascular | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Renin | Low | Low | High |
| Aldosterone | High | Low | High |
| Primary treatment | Aldosterone antagonist | Amiloride | Angiotensin receptor blocker |
| (spironolactone or eplerenone) | |||
| Amiloride for men where | (rarely revascularization) | ||
| eplerenone is not available | |||
| (rarely surgery) |
(Reproduced by permission of Oxford University Press from: Akintunde A, Nondi J, Gogo K, Jones ESW, Rayner BL, Hackam DG, et al. Physiological Phenotyping for Personalized Therapy of Uncontrolled Hypertension in Africa. Am J Hypertens 2017; 30: 923-30.)
It should be stressed that this approach is suitable for tailoring medical therapy in patients with resistant hypertension; further investigation would be required to justify adrenalectomy or renal revascularization.
Levels of plasma renin and aldosterone must be interpreted in the light of the medication the patient is taking at the time of sampling. In a patient taking an angiotensin receptor blocker (which would elevate renin and lower aldosterone), a plasma renin that is in the low normal range for that laboratory, with a plasma aldosterone in the high normal range, probably represents primary hyperaldosteronism for the purposes of adjusting medical therapy.
Angiotensin Converting Enzyme (ACE) inhibitors are less effective because of aldosterone escape via non-ACE pathways such as chymase and cathepsin; renin inhibitors are seldom used.
Figure 1White thrombus in a retinal artery This phenomenon was perhaps first described by C Miller Fisher in a clinical case discussion in the New England Journal Of Medicine. I have seen it twice, when I happened to be present when patients with carotid stenosis had sudden loss of vision in one eye. Ophthalmoscopic examination revealed white thrombus, about the color of white bread, oozing gradually through the retinal artery; when the thrombus clears, vision returns; this often happens in quadrants or hemifields of the monocular vision as branches of the retinal artery clear sequentially. (Reproduced by permission of Vanderbilt University Press from: Spence J.D. How to Prevent Your Stroke. Vanderbilt University Press, 2006.)
Properties of Direct-acting Oral Anticoagulants*
| Characteristic | Dabigatran | Rivaroxaban | Apixaban | Edoxaban |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target | Factor IIa | Factor Xa | Factor Xa | Factor Xa |
| Prodrug | Yes | No | No | No |
| Dosing | BID | OD | BID | OD |
| Bioavailability | 6.5% | 80–100% | 50% | 62% |
| Half-life | 12–14 h | 5–13 h | 8–15 h | 10–14 h |
| Renal clearance | 85% | ~33% | ~27% | ~50% |
| Cmax | 1–2 h | 2–4 h | 3–4 h | 1–2 h |
| Interactions | P-gp inhibitors | Strong inhibitors of CYP3A4 and P-gp | Strong inhibitors of CYP3A4 and P-gp | P-gp inhibitors |
OD: once daily; BID: twice daily; CYP3A4: intestinal cytochrome P450 3A4; Cmax: time to maximal blood concentration; P-gp: P-glycoprotein
In order of appearance on the market.
Figure 2Thrombus on the left atrial side of a percutaneous PFO closure device The patient had a Stroke in 2000 at the age of 54 years; PFO closure was performed using a CardioSEAL device in 2003. In 2008, he had a transient ischemic attack; echocardiography showed thrombus on the device. The thrombus failed to dissolve in 6 months of intensive anticoagulation, so open heart surgery was performed in 2009 to remove the thrombus and the device, with surgical closure of the PFO. The upper panel shows the open left atrium; lower left image is the echocardiographic image of the thrombus (white arrow). Lower right image is the surgically removed device. (Courtesy of Dr. Bob Kiaii and Dr. Bryan Dias, University Hospital, London, Canada.)
Clinical clues to paradoxical embolism
| Cryptogenic stroke, plus any of |
| Dyspnea |
| ↓ pO2, ↓ pCO2 |
| Loud P2, Pulmonic regurge |
| Loss of consciousness at onset of carotid stroke |
| Long ride in a car, airplane; prolonged sitting |
| Swollen leg, previous DVT, varicose veins |
| Pulmonary emboli in past |
| Valsalva maneuver |
| Waking up with stroke |
| Sleep apnea |
(Based on data from: Ozdemir AO, Tamayo A, Munoz C, Dias B, Spence JD. Cryptogenic stroke and patent foramen ovale: clinical clues to paradoxical embolism. J Neurol Sci 2008; 275: 121-7.)
P<0.05.
Figure 3Grading of right-left shunt in PFO by transcranial Doppler (TCD) Transcranial Doppler screen shots of Spencer shunt grades are shown for example of cases missed by trans-esophageal echocardiography with sedation. It can be seen that the presence of bubbles in the cerebral arteries is obvious; besides the visual output on the screen, a loud signal is heard from the audio output with each bubble crossing the patent foramen ovale. Grade 0, no microemboli detected; grade 1, 1–10 microemboli; grade 2, 11–30 microemboli; grade 3, 31–100 microemboli; grade 4, 101–300 microemboli; and grade 5, >300 microemboli. (Reproduced by permission of Elsevier from: Tobe J, Bogiatzi C, Munoz C, Tamayo A, Spence JD. Transcranial Doppler is Complementary to Echocardiography for Detection and Risk Stratification of Patent Foramen Ovale. Can J Cardiol 2016; 32: 986 e9-e16.)