A new study has said that stroke hospitalizations among Americans under 45, particularly teenage boys and men under 34, rose dramatically between 1994 and 2007

"I believe this is the first large study to report these findings, stratified by age and gender," said Xin Tong, a health statistician with the US Centers for Disease Control in Atlanta, Georgia.
"We cannot link anything in particular to the trend in younger patients, but I believe the role of obesity and hypertension will prompt a big discussion. Unfortunately, right now we can't speculate on the causes."
CDC analysts found that stroke numbers had declined by 25 percent in men and by 29 percent in women over age 45.
But the good news ended there. The number of hospitalizations for ischemic stroke -- a stroke caused by a vessel blockage that interferes with blood flow to the brain -- rose 51 percent in boys and men age 15 to 34.
The rate among girls and women age 15 to 34 rose 17 percent in the same period.
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Tong said medical professionals should take note of the shift when treating stroke patients, keeping in mind that younger people could benefit from a clot-busting tissue plasminogen activator (tPA) within hours after a stroke.
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The research was presented in Los Angeles at the American Stroke Association's International Stroke Conference 2011.
Source-AFP