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Emerging Technology Helps Predict Brain Age and Stroke Recovery

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The study team analyzed 4,163 ischaemic stroke patients across the US and Europe. It showed how stroke patients with ‘older-appearing’ brains, characterized by a higher predicted brain age than chronological age, were more likely to suffer from hypertension, diabetes mellitus, or have a history of smoking or prior stroke.

Stroke Recovery using Image-Quantifying Technology

Patients with older appearing brains were also less likely to achieve favorable post-stroke outcomes in comparison with their younger-looking counterparts.

Led by Dr. Martin Bretzner from Harvard Medical School (Boston, USA), the research team considered that whilst chronological age measures the amount of time a person has lived, it is less likely to precisely capture how well a patient has aged.

By estimating the age of a patient’s brain, this novel biomarker provides insight into the resilience of a brain to time and cardiovascular risk factors, and how well patients recover from a stroke.

The technique – radiomics – leverages advanced mathematical analysis to explore neuroimaging data available to clinicians, allowing experts to predict patients’ relative brain age compared to other stroke survivors and analyze their overall brain health.

“Age is one of the most influential determinants of post-stroke outcomes, but little is known about the impact of neuroimaging-derived biological ‘brain age'”, commented Dr. Martin Bretzner. “Our results show that quantifying relative brain age in stroke patients can be beneficial in assessing a patient’s brain health globally, and useful in predicting how well the patient will recover from a stroke. It would also be very easy to communicate on this biomarker with clinicians and patients, as everyone instinctively understands the negative implications of an accelerated brain aging process.”

Impact of Relative Brain Age

The study found that relative brain age impacted stroke outcomes independently from chronological age and stroke severity. Having previously suffered from a stroke was the most influential clinical factor that impacted relative brain age, followed by diabetes.

According to research, one in four-stroke survivors will have another stroke2, and yet up to 80 percent might be prevented with the right treatments and lifestyle changes.3 The number of people living with stroke is estimated to rise by 27% between 2017 and 2047 in the European Union, mainly due to an increase in the number of people over 70.4.

“These findings stress the importance of minimizing cardiovascular risk factors and also highlight how cardiovascular health and brain health are tightly intertwined”, added Dr. Bretzner. “Identifying potentially modifiable risk factors that impact brain health by using radiomics and relative brain age as a biomarker could lead to the development of stroke prevention interventions and aid recovery.”

“We hope that this research will serve as a support to identify fragile stroke patients that require more intensive prevention techniques, treatments and surveillance in the future.”






Source: Medindia

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