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Abstract
There is an urgent need for improved diagnostics and therapeutics for acute ischemic
stroke. This is the focus of numerous research projects involving in vitro studies,
animal models and clinical trials, all of which are based on current knowledge of
disease mechanisms underlying acute focal cerebral ischemia. Insight in the chain
of events occurring during acute ischemic injury is essential for understanding current
and future diagnostic and therapeutic approaches. In this review, we summarize the
actual knowledge on the pathophysiology of acute ischemic stroke. We focus on the
ischemic cascade, which is a complex series of neurochemical processes that are unleashed
by transient or permanent focal cerebral ischemia and involves cellular bioenergetic
failure, excitotoxicity, oxidative stress, blood-brain barrier dysfunction, microvascular
injury, hemostatic activation, post-ischemic inflammation and finally cell death of
neurons, glial and endothelial cells.