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Circadian variation in stroke onset: identical temporal pattern in ischemic and hemorrhagic events
Authors:Manfredini Roberto  Boari Benedetta  Smolensky Michael H  Salmi Raffaella  la Cecilia Olga  Maria Malagoni Anna  Haus Erhard  Manfredini Fabio
Institution:  a Vascular Diseases Center, Department of Clinical and Experimental Medicine, University of Ferrara, Ferrara, Italy b School of Public Health, University of Texas-Houston Health Sciences Center, Houston, TX, USA c Department of Laboratory Medicine and Pathology, University of Minnesota, HealthPartners Medical Group, Regions Hospital, St. Paul, MN, USA
Abstract:Stroke is the culmination of a heterogeneous group of cerebrovascular diseases that is manifested as ischemia or hemorrhage of one or more blood vessels of the brain. The occurrence of many acute cardiovascular events—such as myocardial infarction, sudden cardiac death, pulmonary embolism, critical limb ischemia, and aortic aneurysm rupture—exhibits prominent 24 h patterning, with a major morning peak and secondary early evening peak. The incidence of stroke exhibits the same 24 h pattern. Although ischemic and hemorrhagic strokes are different entities and are characterized by different pathophysiological mechanisms, they share an identical double-peak 24 h pattern. A constellation of endogenous circadian rhythms and exogenous cyclic factors are involved. The staging of the circadian rhythms in vascular tone, coagulative balance, and blood pressure plus temporal patterns in posture, physical activity, emotional stress, and medication effects play central and/or triggering roles. Features of the circadian rhythm of blood pressure, in terms of their chronic and acute effects on cerebral vessels, and of coagulation are especially important. Clinical medicine has been most concerned with the prevention of stroke in the morning, when population-based studies show it is of greatest risk during the 24 h; however, improved protection of at-risk patients against stroke in the early evening, the second most vulnerable time of cerebrovascular accidents, has received relatively little attention thus far.
Keywords:Circadian Rhythm  Chronobiology  Ischemic Stroke  Hemorrhagic Stroke  Blood Pressure  Blood Coagulation  Fibrinolysis  Physical Activity  Emotional Stress  Chronotherapy
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