Cause
Causes of ischemic stroke
An
ischemic
stroke
is caused by a blood clot that blocks blood flow to the brain. A
blood clot can develop in a narrowed artery that supplies the brain or can
travel from the heart (or elsewhere in the body) to an artery that supplies the
brain.
Blood clots are usually the result of other problems in the body
that affect the normal flow of blood, such as:
Low blood pressure (hypotension) may also cause an ischemic
stroke, although less commonly. Low blood pressure results in reduced blood
flow to the brain and may develop as a result of narrowed or diseased arteries,
a heart attack, a large loss of blood, or a severe infection.
Some surgeries (such as endarterectomy) or other procedures (such
as angioplasty) that are used to treat narrowed carotid arteries may cause a
blood clot to break loose, resulting in a stroke.
Causes of hemorrhagic stroke
A
hemorrhagic stroke is caused by bleeding inside the
brain (called intracerebral hemorrhage) or bleeding in the space around the
brain (called subarachnoid hemorrhage). Bleeding inside the brain may be a
result of long-standing high blood pressure. Bleeding in the space around the
brain may be caused by a ruptured
aneurysm or uncontrolled high blood pressure.
Other causes of hemorrhagic stroke are less common but
include:
- Inflammation in the blood vessels, which may
develop from conditions such as
syphilis,
Lyme disease,
vasculitis, or
tuberculosis.
- Blood-clotting disorders,
such as
hemophilia.
- Head or neck injuries that
result in damage to blood vessels in the head or neck.
- Radiation
treatment for cancer in the neck or brain.
- Cerebral amyloid
angiopathy (a degenerative blood vessel disorder).