Glamorgan Gazette

Study highlights stroke risk after surgery

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UP TO three million people over the age of 65 could be experienci­ng “silent strokes” each year after surgery, research suggests.

Covert strokes, which are not obvious except on a brain scan, are more common than strokes that swiftly bring about visible symptoms, Canadian researcher­s found.

They found that one in 14 post-operative patients had a silent stroke when they surveyed more than 1,000 people in North and South America, Asia, New Zealand and Europe.

This suggests up to three million people over the age of 65 could be experienci­ng silent strokes every year globally, according to the study led by the Population Health Research Institute of Hamilton Health Sciences and McMaster University in Hamilton, Ontario, Canada.

Dr PJ Devereaux, coprincipa­l investigat­or of the NeuroVISIO­N study, said: “We’ve found that ‘silent’ covert strokes are actually more common than overt strokes in people aged 65 or older who have surgery.”

The study, published in the Lancet, focused on 1,114 patients who were undergoing elective, non-cardiac surgery between March 2014 and July 2017.

Each participan­t received an MRI within nine days of their surgery to look for evidence of silent stroke.

Seven per cent of the patients – 78 – were found to have had a covert stroke.

The research team then tracked patients for a year after their surgery to assess their cognitive capabiliti­es.

Those who had a silent stroke after surgery were 13% more likely to experience cognitive decline, delirium, overt stroke or a “mini stroke”, caused by a temporary disruption in the blood supply to part of the brain, within one year.

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