Who fucking cares? SURVIVORS WANT RECOVERY! I've never heard a survivor ask for 'care'; I'd suggest you talk to survivors sometime; they all want recovery, and you are failing survivors!
What will stroke care look like in 2050?
Acute stroke
Past predictions
Until the mid-1990s, there was no scientifically proven treatment for acute stroke. By 2000, there were five proven scientific treatments or expanded indications, including the first medical treatment for ischemic stroke, t-PA. In 2003, Broderick predicted that novel mechanical devices would remove blood clots blocking brain arteries, with and without t-PA, improving outcomes by restoring blood flow to the brain. However, his prediction that neuroprotection techniques like rapid hypothermia would play a role during blood flow restoration has not yet come to fruition. “All these predictions proved to be pretty accurate, except for neuroprotection, which has been a very hard nut to crack and still has defied our best efforts,” wrote Broderick. “Regardless, we now have 20 scientifically proven treatments or expanded indications, including additional thrombolytic agents, various catheter devices, mobile stroke units, surgical treatment for selected patients with brain hemorrhage and drugs to slow bleeding in patients with brain hemorrhage. “The largest advance has been mechanical clot removal for ischemic stroke, first within six hours of onset and then out to 24 hours with appropriate imaging selection.”A vastly more useful intervention would be by just stopping the 5 causes of the neuronal cascade of death in the first week saving hundreds of millions to billions of neurons!
This is not going to be easy as Dr. Michael Tymianski, of the Toronto Western Hospital Research Institute in Canada states; over the last half-century, there have been more than 1,000 drugs (So what are they?)aimed at preventing brain damage that have failed to work in people, even though they worked well in mice or rats. Because this? Rodent inflammation is not the same as human inflammation
In 2050?
Patient wearables will help begin stroke diagnosis at home, leading to specific treatments for ischemic and hemorrhagic stroke starting before arrival at the hospital for more patients. But treatment of ischemic stroke may reach the limits of biology and technology, as it has for myocardial infarction, which has not seen a major advance for a number of years. Clot removal devices will become smaller and safer, and researchers will solve the challenge of neuroprotection that has not been solved yet. Treatment of ICH will continue to advance but remain the most challenging stroke to treat. “We are going to need larger global trials to find much smaller benefits as our success in acute stroke has dramatically increased,” Broderick said. “Artificial intelligence (AI) and telemedicine will play an even more important part in clinical decision-making worldwide and will help to deliver the best care to locations that currently lack expertise and resources. Finally, physiological time will remain the most important variable for success for all types of strokes.”(Neuroprotection is a milquetoast term saying nothing! Should be correctly called the
neuronal cascade of death!(From Rockefeller University- January 15, 2009 Signifying an immediate need to prevent that!)
Stroke prevention
Past predictions
In 1975, researchers had just identified the effectiveness of treating hypertension to prevent a first stroke and preventing a second stroke with aspirin. By 2000, the medical community had 14 proven primary and secondary prevention treatments.
In 2003, Broderick predicted stroke would remain a great burden if at-risk behaviors and the high cost of therapies were not addressed and no treatments were available to delay or halt aging. Over the past years, the U.S. population has become much more obese.
Reductions in U.S. cigarette smoking rates and better managed hypertension have led to a decrease in the overall incidence of stroke in the Greater Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky region, but strokes have numerically increased among younger people. In 2025, we now have 35 proven prevention treatments and expanded indications.
“We know that the Mediterranean diet decreases the risk of recurrent stroke,” Broderick said of current stroke prevention advances. “We have four novel anticoagulants for primary and secondary prevention, primarily in patients with atrial fibrillation; more antiplatelet agents; genetic and medical treatments for sickle cell disease and other genetic diseases associated with stroke; stents for carotid arteries; mechanical devices to close holes between the upper chambers of the heart; and devices that close off chambers in the left atrium of the heart that can harbor blood clots for appropriately selected patients.
“The newest entrees for prevention have been GLP-1 and GIP receptor medications, which not only improve diabetic control and weight loss but also improve cardiovascular outcomes.”
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