Cocaine ups stroke risk within 24 hours of use
Cocaine greatly increases stroke risk in young adults within 24 hours of use: Study
Washington: Cocaine greatly increases stroke risk in young adults within 24 hours of use, a new study has warned. Researchers found that cocaine users were six to seven times more likely to suffer an ischemic stroke within 24 hours of drug use.
Ischemic strokes occur when a blood vessel supplying blood to the brain becomes blocked, preventing a continuous supply of blood to the brain.
"We set out to understand what factors contribute to stroke risk in young adults," said Yu-Ching Cheng, research scientist at Baltimore Veterans Affairs Medical Center and assistant professor of medicine at the University of Maryland School of Medicine.
"These factors could be personal behaviors, medical or environmental factors, or genetic factors," Cheng said. "Cocaine use is one of the risk factors we investigated and we were surprised at how strong an association there is between cocaine and stroke risk in young adults.
"We found the stroke risk associated with acute cocaine use is much higher than some other stroke risk factors, such as diabetes, high blood pressure and smoking," Cheng said.
Researchers compared 1,101 people 15 to 49 years old in the Baltimore-Washington, DC area who had strokes in 1991-2008 to 1,154 people of similar ages in the general population.
More than a quarter of the people in both groups said they had a history of cocaine use, with men being twice as likely as women to report using the drug.
Having a history of cocaine use wasn't associated with ischemic stroke, regardless of a person's gender or ethnicity; however, reported acute use of cocaine in the 24 hours prior to stroke was strongly associated with increased risk of stroke across different ethnicities, researchers said.
Participants were six to seven times more likely to suffer an ischemic stroke within 24 hours of cocaine use. This elevated stroke risk seemed similar in Caucasians and
African-Americans, they added.
"Cocaine is not only addictive, it can also lead to disability or death from stroke. With few exceptions, we believe every young stroke patient should be screened for drug abuse at the time of hospital admission," Cheng said.
"Despite the strong stroke risk associated with acute cocaine use, in our study only about one-third of young stroke patients had toxicology screenings done during hospitalization.
"We think the percentage of cocaine use could be higher than we've reported," Cheng said.
The research was presented at the American Stroke Association's International Stroke Conference 2014 in San Diego.