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Could MRI scans be used to reduce risk of stroke patients suffering deadly brain bleeds?

16 May 2018

A study published today in The Lancet Neurology,Ìýled by ¹û¶³Ó°Ôº Stroke Research Centre researchers at the Institute of Neurology, finds blood-sensitive MRI scans can be used to better predict a stroke patient's risk of deadly brain bleeds These findings,Ìýwhich were simultaneously presented at the European Stroke Organisation Conference by Professor David Werring, could help better inform treatment decisions about blood thinners for up to around 20,000 patients with stroke who are found to have an irregular heartbeat each year in the UK.

Stroke MRI scan MRI scans couldÌýhelpÌýreveal whether stroke survivors will face a higher risk of deadly brain bleeds if prescribedÌý"blood thinners" (anticoagulants). Many stroke survivors take blood thinners to manage an irregular heartbeatÌý(atrial fibrillation; AF), but prior evidence has shown that blood thinners could increase the risk of subsequent brain bleeds in certain patients;Ìýthis study has identified a way ofÌýbetterÌýpredicting which patients would be at risk of brain bleeds, by looking for cerebral microbleeds -Ìýtiny brain bleeds seen on blood-sensitiveÌýMRI scans.

The study was jointly funded by The Stroke Association and the British Heart Foundation.

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