| Literature DB >> 32636794 |
Ming Jiang1, Cheng Ma1, Haiying Li1, Haitao Shen1, Xiang Li1, Qing Sun1, Gang Chen1.
Abstract
Sex dimorphisms are important factors that influence the outcomes after ischemic stroke, which include basic health status, cerebrovascular anatomy, hormone levels, and unique factors such as pregnancy and menopause. It is widely recognized that male and female respond differently to stroke. Women aged 45-74 years old showed a lower risk of stroke incidence compared to age-matched man. This kind of protection is lost with aging. Hence, there is increasing requirement to get a more comprehensive understanding of sex-based factors to stroke on stroke incidence, symptoms, and treatments. This review focuses on sex-specific mechanisms in response to stroke based on experimental studies and highlights recent findings in clinical studies including sex-differential evaluation and outcomes of stroke. Sex-based personalized medicine should be promising in stroke therapies.Entities:
Keywords: clinic; evaluation; hormone; mechanism; sex differences; stroke; tPA
Year: 2020 PMID: 32636794 PMCID: PMC7318992 DOI: 10.3389/fneur.2020.00504
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neurol ISSN: 1664-2295 Impact factor: 4.003
Sex differences in immune cells after stroke.
| Microglia | Female microglia exhibit a protective phenotype while male microglia exhibit an inflammatory phenotype | ( |
| Macrophage | Female macrophage secrete higher level of IL-1β and IL-6 | ( |
| Dendritic cells | Dendritic cells promote female predominant Th2 cytokine production | ( |
| Monocytes | Female mice show an increasing number of monocytes compared to male | ( |
| Regulatory T cells | Regulatory T cell in female may selective up-regulated | ( |
| NK cells | Female have more NK cells than male | ( |
| Neutrophils | Little evidence was found in subject of sex differences | |
| B cells | Little evidence was found in subject of sex differences |
Effect of tPA treatment on stroke outcomes and mortality.
| 2,178 | Women benefit more from tPA compared with men ( | ( |
| 1,272 | Reduced mortality in women ( | ( |
| 887 | Women had a better outcome in the age group 51–60 years old compared with men (OR 0.38; 95% CI [0.15–0.96]. In the age group >80 years old, men had a better outcome than women (OR 2.69, 95% CI [1.21–5.96]). | ( |
| 25,777 | No difference between sexes in functional outcome (OR 1.03; 95% CI [0.97–1.09]; | ( |
| 9,914 | No sex difference in outcome at 3 months (adjusted OR for women 1.41; 95% CI [0.76–2.60]), and in 90-days mortality (adjusted OR 1.38; 95% CI [0.59–3.19]). | ( |
| 1,110 | No difference in NIHSS score and mortality between men and women | ( |
| 156 | At day 90, no significant sex difference in functional outcome (50.9% of women compared with 57.0% of men, | ( |
| 1,391 | No effect of sex was seen on outcome (OR 1.04; CI [0.76–1.43]); or mortality (OR 1.13; CI [0.73–1.73]). | ( |