Blood Biomarkers of Parenchymal Damage in Ischemic Stroke Patients Treated With Revascularization Therapies

Biomark Insights. 2019 Dec 24:14:1177271919888225. doi: 10.1177/1177271919888225. eCollection 2019.

Abstract

Purpose: Postischemic reperfusion injury may exacerbate cerebral damage and capillary dysfunction, leading to brain edema (BE), hemorrhagic transformation (HT), necrosis, and injury from free radicals with subsequent infarct growth (IG). Several plasmatic biomarkers involved in the ischemic cascade have been studied in relation to radiological and clinical outcomes of reperfusion injury in ischemic stroke with heterogeneous results. This article provides a brief overview of the contribution of circulating biomarkers to the pathophysiology of parenchymal damage in ischemic stroke patients treated with revascularization therapies.

Methods: We included full reports with measurements of plasma markers in patients with acute ischemic stroke treated with revascularization therapies.

Findings: Our research included a large number of observational studies investigating a possible role of circulating biomarkers in the development of parenchymal damage after acute stroke treatments. To make the results clearer, we divided the review in 4 sections, exploring the relation of different biomarkers with each of the indicators of parenchymal damage (HT, BE, IG, recanalization).

Discussion and conclusion: Definite conclusions are difficult to draw because of heterogeneity across studies. However, our review seems to confirm an association between some circulating biomarkers (particularly matrix metalloproteinase-9) and occurrence of parenchymal damage in ischemic stroke patients treated with revascularization therapies.

Keywords: Biomarkers; matrix metalloproteinases; reperfusion injury; stroke; thrombolytic therapy.

Publication types

  • Review