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    Antiplatelets and Vascular Dementia: A Systematic Review

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    Author
    Alexander, Peter
    Visagan, Shakthi
    Jawhar, Sara
    Kare, Amogh
    Issa, Noor
    Issa, Reem
    Jawhar, Abbas
    Thomas, Sneha
    Gorantla, Vasavi
    Date
    2022-09-19
    Journal
    Journal of Aging Research
    Type
    Article
    
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    See at
    https://doi.org/10.1155/2022/9780067
    Abstract
    Vascular dementia (VD) is a neurocognitive disorder whose precise definition is still up for debate. VD generally refers to dementia that is primarily caused by cerebrovascular disease or impaired cerebral blood flow. It is a subset of vascular cognitive impairment, a class of diseases that relate any cerebrovascular injury as a causal or correlating factor for cognitive decline, most commonly seen in the elderly. Patients who present with both cognitive impairment and clinical or radiologic indications of cerebrovascular pathology should have vascular risk factors, particularly hypertension, examined and treated. While these strategies may be more effective at avoiding dementia than at ameliorating it, there is a compelling case for intensive secondary stroke prevention in these patients. Repeated stroke is related to an increased chance of cognitive decline, and poststroke dementia is connected with an increased risk of death. In general, most physicians follow recommendations for secondary stroke prevention in patients with VD, which can be accomplished by the use of antithrombotic medicines such as antiplatelets (aspirin, clopidogrel, ticlopidine, cilostazol, etc.). In individuals with a high risk of atherosclerosis and those with documented symptomatic cerebrovascular illness, antiplatelets treatment lowers the risk of stroke. While this therapy strategy of prevention and rigorous risk management has a compelling justification, there is only limited and indirect data to support it. The following systematic review examines the role of antiplatelets in the management of vascular dementia in published clinical trials and studies and comments on the current evidence available to support their use and highlights the need for further study. © 2022 Peter Alexander et al.
    Identifier to cite or link to this item
    http://hdl.handle.net/10713/20009
    ae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
    10.1155/2022/9780067
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