Journal article

Hypoxic tissue in ischaemic stroke: Persistence and clinical consequences of spontaneous survival

R Markus, DC Reutens, S Kazui, S Read, P Wright, DC Pearce, HJ Tochon-Danguy, JI Sachinidis, GA Donnan

Brain | OXFORD UNIV PRESS | Published : 2004

Abstract

In ischaemic stroke, expansion of the infarct core occurs at the expense of surrounding hypoxic, metabolically compromised tissue over a period of 24 h or more in a considerable proportion of patients. It is uncertain whether hypoxic tissue observed at later times after stroke onset retains the potential for survival or whether such survival has an impact on functional outcome. These factors may determine the effectiveness of therapeutic strategies aimed at salvaging this tissue. We tested the hypotheses that metabolically compromised hypoxic tissue observed within 48 h after onset of ischaemic stroke retains the potential for spontaneous survival and that the impact of such survival on func..

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University of Melbourne Researchers