Internal body
clock dictates timing of different types of stroke
The internal body clock, or
circadian rhythm, seems to influence the timing of
different types of stroke, suggests research published
ahead of print in the Journal of Neurology Neurosurgery
and Psychiatry.
The research team analyzed data
from almost 13,000 patients who had had one of three
types of stroke for the first time, diagnosed by brain
scan.
These patients' data had been
collected on a stroke register, showing that cerebral
infarction, where blood flow to brain arteries is
restricted, was the most common type of stroke. The rate
was 89 per 100,000 of the population.
Subarachnoid hemorrhage, where
bleeds occur in the arteries at the brain's surface, was
the least common type at 18 per 100,000 of the
population. Intracerebral hemorrhage, where bleeds occur
within the brain, numbered 45 per 100,000 of the
population.
Where the timing of the stroke
was recorded as either during waking hours or during
sleep, the researchers looked for any obvious patterns
among the different types, by dividing the wake-sleep
cycle into 12 two hour intervals.
Men tended to be around five
years younger than women for all the different types,
but there was little variation between the sexes in
respect of the timing of the various types of stroke.
All three stroke types
registered two peaks during the day, one between 6 and 8
in the morning and the other between 6 and 8 in the
evening, with a significant dip in the numbers of
strokes occurring during sleep.
But closer analysis showed that
cerebral infarction had a higher peak in the morning and
a lower peak in the afternoon than the other two.
Intracerebral hemorrhage and
Subarachnoid hemorrhage, on the other hand, were more
likely to have lower peaks in the morning and higher
peaks in the afternoon than cerebral infarction.
Around one in five cases of
cerebral infarction occurred during sleep, with most
cases concentrated in the period immediately before
waking up, although the stroke would probably have begun
earlier, say the authors.
Sleep lowers blood pressure in
the body, so cuts the risk of stroke, but low blood
pressure is a risk factor for cerebral infarction, say
the authors.