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'Silent strokes' an epidemic in U.S., study finds  added 2/17/01
By Daniel Q. Haney   The Associated Press   Printed  Feb 17 2001, Seattle Times

FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. - A surprising 11 million Americans each year have strokes that are never detected because they cause no obvious symptoms, although over time they may lead to memory loss and other ills, a study at the UCLA Medical Center concludes.

Doctors have long known that people can have insidious "silent strokes" - tiny spots of dead cells inside the brain that do not cause classic stroke symptoms. But the new study suggests they are extremely common, occurring in about 4 percent of the U.S. population each year.

Besides the 11 million Americans who have silent strokes annually, about 750,000 more have ones that cause classic stroke symptoms, such as slurred speech, dizziness and numbness on one side.

"Silent strokes are epidemic in this country," said Dr. Megan Leary.
While they occur in parts of the brain where they don't cause symptoms right away, she said "the word `silent' should be put in quotes, because their effects accumulate over the years."

While a single silent stroke may have no impact, repeated ones lead to memory lapses, mood problems and difficulty walking.
They are also a sign that people are especially prone to full-blown strokes.

The results were released at a meeting of the American Stroke Association in Fort Lauderdale. {Feb 15, 2001}

The researchers say silent strokes are rare before age 30.
But after that, their prevalence doubles every 10 years.
By the time people reach their 70s, one in three has a silent stroke every year.

The researchers also found that some people have more than one silent stroke in a year.
When these are added, Americans have almost 22 million silent strokes annually.
This means that only 3 percent of the total number of strokes in 1998, when the data were compiled, were actually diagnosed.

Leary based her estimate on two surveys involving brain scans on about 5,500 Americans.

Doctors can see the scars left by silent strokes in routine brain scans.
But ordinarily they do not search for them.
However, the new data raise the possibility that they should, since people who have one silent stroke are likely to have many more.

Strokes can be prevented by keeping blood pressure under control, lowering cholesterol, treating diabetes and stopping smoking. Leary said if people actually know they have had a silent stroke, they might be more willing to stick to blood-pressure medicines and cholesterol-lowering drugs that cut their risk.

In a separate study, Dutch doctors did brain scans on a cross section of 1,077 elderly people.
They found that one-quarter of them had signs of stroke, and 80 percent of these were silent strokes.

"Up until now, we have not told people about silent strokes because we didn't know what they mean," said Dr. Sarah E. Vermeer of Erasmus Medical Center in Rotterdam. "Now we have evidence that silent strokes do count."

see also another silent stroke article