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A Mechanistic and Pathophysiological Approach for Stroke Associated with Drugs of Abuse

Journal

JOURNAL OF CLINICAL MEDICINE
Volume 8, Issue 9, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/jcm8091295

Keywords

stroke; amphetamines; cocaine; cannabis; morphine; heroin; synthetic cannabinoids; anabolic androgenic steroids

Funding

  1. Ministry of Research and Innovation in Romania [7PFE/16.10.2018]
  2. [PN-III-P1-1.2-PCCDI-2017-0341/2018]
  3. [PN 19.29.01.01]

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Drugs of abuse are associated with stroke, especially in young individuals. The major classes of drugs linked to stroke are cocaine, amphetamines, heroin, morphine, cannabis, and new synthetic cannabinoids, along with androgenic anabolic steroids (AASs). Both ischemic and hemorrhagic stroke have been reported due to drug abuse. Several common mechanisms have been identified, such as arrhythmias and cardioembolism, hypoxia, vascular toxicity, vascular spasm and effects on the thrombotic mechanism, as causes for ischemic stroke. For hemorrhagic stroke, acute hypertension, aneurysm formation/rupture and angiitis-like changes have been implicated. In AAS abuse, the effect of blood pressure is rather substance specific, whereas increased erythropoiesis usually leads to thromboembolism. Transient vasospasm, caused by synthetic cannabinoids, could lead to ischemic stroke. Opiates often cause infective endocarditis, resulting in ischemic stroke and hypereosinophilia accompanied by pyogenic arthritis, provoking hemorrhagic stroke. Genetic variants are linked to increased risk for stroke in cocaine abuse. The fact that case reports on cannabis-induced stroke usually refer to the young population is very alarming.

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