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Acute and long-term changes in serum lipids after acute stroke.

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TLDR
It is concluded that in studies of serum lipid and lipoprotein concentrations as risk factors for cerebral infarction, comparing values obtained less than or equal to 48 hours after admission with control values may incorrectly identify certain lipid fractions as risk factor.
Abstract
We studied serum lipid profiles in 171 patients less than or equal to 48 hours after the onset of acute stroke and 3 months later. The 83 patients suffering cerebral infarction had significantly higher serum concentrations of total cholesterol, low density lipoprotein-cholesterol, and apolipoprotein B and significantly lower serum concentrations of triglycerides and lipoprotein (a) less than or equal to 48 hours after ictus than 3 months later. The lipid profiles of the 53 patients suffering lacunar infarction were similar on both occasions, the only significant differences being higher total cholesterol and low density lipoprotein-cholesterol concentrations less than or equal to 48 hours after ictus. No significant changes were observed among the 35 patients suffering cerebral hemorrhage apart from a significantly higher concentration of high density lipoprotein3-cholesterol less than or equal to 48 hours after ictus. Our study, with many patients classified according to stroke subtype, gives results different from those of previous studies with much fewer patients. We conclude that in studies of serum lipid and lipoprotein concentrations as risk factors for cerebral infarction, comparing values obtained less than or equal to 48 hours after admission with control values may incorrectly identify certain lipid fractions as risk factors.

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Citations
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Influence of total cholesterol, high density lipoprotein cholesterol, and triglycerides on risk of cerebrovascular disease: the Copenhagen City Heart Study.

TL;DR: The pattern of the association between plasma cholesterol and risk of ischaemic cerebrovascular disease was not log linear, and the increased risk was confined to the upper 5% of the cholesterol distribution.
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High-Density Lipoprotein Cholesterol and Ischemic Stroke in the Elderly: The Northern Manhattan Stroke Study

TL;DR: Increased HDL-C levels are associated with reduced risk of ischemic stroke in the elderly and among different racial or ethnic groups, and these data add to the evidence relating lipids to stroke and support LDL-C as an important modifiable stroke risk factor.
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Intracerebral Hemorrhage in Young People Analysis of Risk Factors, Location, Causes, and Prognosis

TL;DR: ICHs in young people are mainly lobar in location and result from vascular malformation, which causes most cases in which the ICH is located in the basal ganglia.
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Associations of serum total cholesterol, different types of stroke, and stenosis distribution of cerebral arteries. The Akita Pathology Study.

TL;DR: Elevated serumolesterol levels were associated with the presence of cortical artery infarction, while low serum cholesterol levels wereassociated with cerebral hemorrhage, and the association of serum cholesterol with pathogenesis varies among stroke types.
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Better outcome after stroke with higher serum cholesterol levels

TL;DR: The authors’ findings suggest that higher levels of cholesterol are associated with a better outcome in the early phase after ischemic stroke.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Estimation of the Concentration of Low-Density Lipoprotein Cholesterol in Plasma, Without Use of the Preparative Ultracentrifuge

TL;DR: A method for estimating the cholesterol content of the serum low-density lipoprotein fraction (Sf0-20) is presented and comparison of this suggested procedure with the more direct procedure, in which the ultracentrifuge is used, yielded correlation coefficients of .94 to .99.
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Are apolipoproteins better discriminators than lipids for atherosclerosis

TL;DR: The protein moiety of lipoproteins is a better discriminator than lipids between atherosclerotic subjects and controls and in the sixth to eighth decades.
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The natural history of lacunar infarction: the Oxfordshire Community Stroke Project.

TL;DR: In a consecutive series of 515 first-ever strokes in a community-based study of stroke that combined prompt clinical assessment by a study neurologist with a high rate of confirmed pathologic diagnosis, 108 cases (21%) had a lacunar syndrome.
Journal ArticleDOI

Lipoprotein(a) as a strong indicator for cerebrovascular disease.

TL;DR: Lp(a) is not only a risk factor for CAD but also for CVD, and the ratio of LDL-C/HDL-C did not show any significant difference between the control and cerebrovascular disease group.
Journal ArticleDOI

Plasma norepinephrine in stroke.

TL;DR: The high plasma norepinephrine in the stroke group is consistent with an increase in peripheral sympathetic activity which could produce the cardiac abnormalities of cerebral infarction.
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