Since this was written in 2006 why has your doctor done nothing to prevent neuronal death? Needs to be rewritten to specify quantities of dead neurons during the
neuronal cascade of death.
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/?term=16339467
Abstract
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE:
The
phrase "time is brain" emphasizes that human nervous tissue is rapidly
lost as stroke progresses and emergent evaluation and therapy are
required. Recent advances in quantitative neurostereology and stroke
neuroimaging permit calculation of just how much brain is lost per unit
time in acute ischemic stroke.
METHODS:
Systematic
literature-review identified consensus estimates of number of neurons,
synapses, and myelinated fibers in the human forebrain; volume of large
vessel, supratentorial ischemic stroke; and interval from onset to
completion of large vessel, supratentorial ischemic stroke.
RESULTS:
The
typical final volume of large vessel, supratentorial ischemic stroke is
54 mL (varied in sensitivity analysis from 19 to 100 mL). The average
duration of nonlacunar stroke evolution is 10 hours (range 6 to 18
hours), and the average number of neurons in the human forebrain is 22
billion. In patients experiencing a typical large vessel acute ischemic
stroke, 120 million neurons, 830 billion synapses, and 714 km (447
miles) of myelinated fibers are lost each hour. In each minute, 1.9
million neurons, 14 billion synapses, and 12 km (7.5 miles) of
myelinated fibers are destroyed. Compared with the normal rate of neuron
loss in brain aging, the ischemic brain ages 3.6 years each hour
without treatment. Altering single input variables in sensitivity
analyses modestly affected the estimated point values but not order of
magnitude.
CONCLUSIONS:
Quantitative estimates of the
pace of neural circuitry loss in human ischemic stroke emphasize the
time urgency of stroke care. The typical patient loses 1.9 million
neurons each minute in which stroke is untreated.
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