New Guidelines Promote Awareness, Prevention
Larry B. Goldstein, MD, director of the Duke Center for
Cerebrovascular Disease and the Duke Stroke Center, has worked
with the American Heart Association (AHA) for over 15 years. He
is currently president of the AHA's Mid-Atlantic affiliate and
has served as chair of AHA's stroke council, a body charged
with developing scientific policy and advancing the science of
stroke care.
In May 2006, the council released revised guidelines for
primary stroke prevention.
“We now do regular updates of our major stroke-related
guidelines every three years,” says Goldstein. “They are all
evidence-based and follow a rigorous process of peer review.
The new guidelines focus on primary stroke prevention.
"We divided stroke risk factors into those that aren’t
modifiable but are important to recognize, those for which we
know treatment reduces risk, and then we have a group of
evolving or new potential risk factors that we’re either not
quite sure how to fit into the mix, or for which there is
limited or no evidence that their treatment reduces stroke
risk.” These include conditions like sleep apnea and
migraine.
Know the Risks
Nonmodifiable risk factors include age, gender, race/ethnic
group, and family history.
Stroke risk increases with age, doubling every ten years
past age 55. Men have a higher risk than women. African
Americans have a 38 percent higher incident of stroke than
whites, with Hispanic Americans having intermediate risk. A
person with a parent, brother, or sister who had a stroke,
particularly at a younger age, is also at increased risk.
While you can’t change these factors, it’s important to know
about them, says Goldstein. “You can then become all the more
aggressive in changing those things you can modify.” These
include making lifestyle changes and treating medical
conditions.
The revised guidelines recommend the following:
- Control blood pressure. The higher the
blood pressure, the greater the risk of stroke. Get screened
for high blood pressure at least every two years; more often
if you are at increased risk. Lowering high blood pressure,
whether by medication or lifestyle changes such as weight
loss, effectively lowers the stroke risk. It’s especially
important for diabetics to get and keep high blood pressure
under control.
- Quit smoking, and avoid exposure to
secondhand smoke. The risk of stroke is doubled for active
smokers, and those exposed to secondhand cigarette smoke
aren’t very far behind. Stroke risk rapidly goes down when
the smoker quits.
- Get active. Aim for thirty minutes or
more of daily physical activity.
- Eat right. Reduce sodium intake (no more
than 2.3 grams per day), increase potassium (at least 4.7
grams per day), and eat a diet rich in fruits and vegetables
-- provided that your doctor has not recommended a special
diet because of other medical conditions.
- Lower cholesterol. Statin drugs in
addition to lifestyle changes are recommended for people with
high cholesterol, coronary artery disease, or diabetes.
- Drink alcohol in moderation, and don’t
use recreational drugs.
Learning your specific risk factors for stroke is vital to
prevention, emphasizes Goldstein. “This time around we
recommended using a stroke risk assessment tool so physicians
and patients can better determine actual risk.”
The guidelines stress that everyone should be assessed to
learn if therapeutic interventions are needed. “People still
think stroke is a problem that only affects old men, but no one
is immune -- and it can often be prevented.”