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Pathophysiologic Mechanisms, Neuroimaging and Treatment in Wake-Up Stroke Publisher Pubmed



Elfil M1 ; Eldokmak M1 ; Baratloo A2, 3 ; Ahmed N1 ; Amin HP1 ; Koo BB1, 4
Authors

Source: CNS Spectrums Published:2020


Abstract

Wake-up stroke (WUS) or ischemic stroke occurring during sleep accounts for 14%–29.6% of all ischemic strokes. Management of WUS is complicated by its narrow therapeutic time window and attributable risk factors, which can affect the safety and efficacy of administering intravenous (IV) tissue plasminogen activator (t-PA). This manuscript will review risk factors of WUS, with a focus on obstructive sleep apnea, potential mechanisms of WUS, and evaluate studies assessing safety and efficacy of IV t-PA treatment in WUS patients guided by neuroimaging to estimate time of symptom onset. The authors used PubMed (1966 to March 2018) to search for the term “Wake-Up Stroke” cross-referenced with “pathophysiology,” ‘‘pathogenesis,” “pathology,” “magnetic resonance imaging,” “obstructive sleep apnea,” or “treatment.” English language Papers were reviewed. Also reviewed were pertinent papers from the reference list of the above-matched manuscripts. Studies that focused only on acute Strokes with known-onset of symptoms were not reviewed. Literature showed several potential risk factors associated with increased risk of WUS. Although the onset of WUS is unknown, a few studies investigated the potential benefit of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) in estimating the age of onset which encouraged conducting clinical trials assessing the efficacy of MRI-guided thrombolytic therapy in WUS. © Cambridge University Press 2019.
2. Sleep Medicine, Miller's Anesthesia, 2 Volume Set (2024)
3. Safety of Current Therapies for Cardiogenic Cerebral Embolism: A Systematic Review, Journal of Endovascular Resuscitation and Trauma Management (2025)
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