Abstract

Acute ischemic stroke, especially minor stroke, and transient ischemic attack have high risks of recurrence and exacerbation into severe ischemic strokes. It remains challenging to perform risk stratification and screen high-risk groups for initiation of early treatment in these patients. Moreover, with the growing population of patients with chronic small vessel disease, the mechanisms and clinical implications require further investigation. Traditional tools such as the ABCD2 score (age, blood pressure, clinical features, duration of symptoms, diabetes) have only moderate predictive value in patients with transient ischemic attack or minor stroke. By contrast, measurement of changes in heart rate variability (HRV) is an important and novel tool for risk stratification and outcome prediction in patients with cardiovascular diseases, as it reflects the overall level of autonomic nervous system dysfunction. Thus, abnormal HRV may be useful for prognosis and improve stratification of stroke patients with diverse risks. HRV may also partially explain autonomic nervous dysfunction and other manifestations during the process of chronic cerebral small vessel disease. In summary, measurement of HRV may contribute to early initiation of interventions in acute or chronic stroke patients using novel treatments involving rebalancing of autonomic nervous system function.

Highlights

  • Neurological disorders are the main contributor to disability-adjusted life-years, for which stroke is largest component (42.2% [38.6–46.1%]) [1]

  • Further studies are required to fully understand the underlying pathogenesis of cerebral small vessel disease (CSVD), it is clear that autonomic nervous system (ANS) function plays an important role

  • VNS repeatedly paired with successful vagal nerve stimulation [72]

Read more

Summary

INTRODUCTION

Neurological disorders are the main contributor to disability-adjusted life-years, for which stroke is largest component (42.2% [38.6–46.1%]) [1]. Patients with significant autonomic dysfunction had more severe stroke at discharge, a higher probability of extensive infarction and inhospital cardiovascular complications, and a poorer outcome at 1 year, which were independent of onset severity, age, hemispheric laterality, or presence of comorbidities Overall, these studies suggest that autonomic function measured by HRV, representing the overall adjustment to a stress response, may be useful for predicting post-stroke clinical outcomes. In the Atherosclerosis Risk in Communities study, HRV was measured in 12,550 middle-aged adults, and Cox regression analysis showed a significant and strong association of reduced HRV parameters with a modest risk of incident stroke in adults with diabetes mellitus, irrespective of traditional cardiovascular risk factors [57] These previous studies demonstrated that decreased HRV precedes poor outcome, suggesting that low HRV may be an early indicator of declining health in populations already at high risk. At 8 weeks after transient MCAO in mice, Frontiers in Neurology | www.frontiersin.org

22 The pNN50 and SDNN have been significantly Transcutaneous electrical acupoint
17 Rats that received VNS during rehab
65 The chronic administration of Catestatin
24 A significant difference of SDNN during
97 Participants with more exercise performed
Findings
CONCLUSIONS
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call