Published January 1, 2024 | Version v1
Journal article Open

Biochemical, biomechanical and imaging biomarkers of ischemic stroke: Time for integrative thinking

  • 1. Bogazici Univ, Inst Biomed Engn, Istanbul, Turkiye
  • 2. Aberystwyth Univ, Dept Life Sci, Aberystwyth, Wales
  • 3. Acibadem Mehmet Ali Aydinlar Univ, Dept Urol, Atasehir, Turkiye
  • 4. Aberystwyth Univ, Dept Comp Sci, Aberystwyth, Wales

Description

Stroke is one of the leading causes of adult disability affecting millions of people worldwide. Post-stroke cognitive and motor impairments diminish quality of life and functional independence. There is an increased risk of having a second stroke and developing secondary conditions with long-term social and economic impacts. With increasing number of stroke incidents, shortage of medical professionals and limited budgets, health services are struggling to provide a care that can break the vicious cycle of stroke. Effective post-stroke recovery hinges on holistic, integrative and personalized care starting from improved diagnosis and treatment in clinics to continuous rehabilitation and support in the community. To improve stroke care pathways, there have been growing efforts in discovering biomarkers that can provide valuable insights into the neural, physiological and biomechanical consequences of stroke and how patients respond to new interventions. In this review paper, we aim to summarize recent biomarker discovery research focusing on three modalities (brain imaging, blood sampling and gait assessments), look at some established and forthcoming biomarkers, and discuss their usefulness and complementarity within the context of comprehensive stroke care. We also emphasize the importance of biomarker guided personalized interventions to enhance stroke treatment and post-stroke recovery.

Stroke affects millions of people annually and many survivors live with disabilities. Clinical decision making using multimodal data has a great potential to improve stroke care pathways all along the way from diagnosis to rehabilitation. This review focuses on three main biomarker modalities including brain imaging (left, ADC image from ISLES 2017 dataset), blood analysis (middle, examples of potential biomarkers) and gait (right, wearable accelerometer data).image

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