Improving outcome after stroke: overcoming the translational roadblock
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BORIS DOI
Publisher DOI
PubMed ID
18292653
Description
Stroke poses a massive burden of disease, yet we have few effective therapies. The paucity of therapeutic options stands contrary to intensive research efforts. The failure of these past investments demands a thorough re-examination of the pathophysiology of ischaemic brain injury. Several critical areas hold the key to overcoming the translational roadblock: (1) vascular occlusion: current recanalization strategies have limited effectiveness and may have serious side effects; (2) complexity of stroke pathobiology: therapy must acknowledge the 'Janus-faced' nature of many stroke targets and must identify endogenous neuroprotective and repair mechanisms; (3) inflammation and brain-immune-system interaction: inflammation contributes to lesion expansion, but is also instrumental in lesion containment and repair; stroke outcome is modulated by the interaction of the injured brain with the immune system; (4) regeneration: the potential of the brain for reorganization, plasticity and repair after injury is much greater than previously thought; (5) confounding factors, long-term outcome and predictive modelling. These 5 areas are linked on all levels and therefore need to be tackled by an integrative approach and innovative therapeutic strategies.
Date of Publication
2008
Publication Type
Article
Language(s)
en
Contributor(s)
Endres, Matthias | |
Koistinaho, Jari | |
Lindvall, Olle | |
Meairs, Stephen | |
Mohr, Jay P | |
Planas, Anna | |
Rothwell, Nancy | |
Schwaninger, Markus | |
Schwab, Martin E | |
Vivien, Denis | |
Wieloch, Tadeusz | |
Dirnagl, Ulrich |
Additional Credits
Series
Cerebrovascular diseases
Publisher
Karger
ISSN
1015-9770
ISBN
18292653
Access(Rights)
open.access