other entities (RWI) can be found at https://professional. heart.org/-/media/phd-files/guidelines-and-statements/ policies-devolopment/aha-asa-disclosure-rwi-policy-5118. pdf?la=en.Beginning in 2017, numerous modifications to AHA/ ASA guidelines have been implemented to make guidelines shorter and enhance user-friendliness. Guidelines are written and presented in a modular knowledge chunk format; each chunk includes a table of recommendations, a brief synopsis, recommendation-specific supportive text, and, when appropriate, flow diagrams or additional tables. Hyperlinked references are provided to facilitate quick access and review. Other modifications to the guidelines include the addition of Knowledge Gaps and Future Research segments in some sections and a web guideline supplement (Online Data Supplement) for useful but noncritical tables and figures.
Abstract-The complement cascade has been implicated in ischemia/reperfusion injury, and recent studies have shown that complement inhibition is a promising treatment option for acute stroke. The development of clinically useful therapies has been hindered, however, by insufficient understanding of which complement subcomponents contribute to post-ischemic injury. To address this issue, we subjected mice deficient in selected complement proteins (C1q, C3, C5) to transient focal cerebral ischemia. Of the strains investigated, only C3 Ϫ/Ϫ mice were protected, as demonstrated by 34% reductions in both infarct volume (PϽ0.01) and neurological deficit score (PϽ0.05). C3-deficient mice also manifested decreased granulocyte infiltration (PϽ0.02) and reduced oxidative stress (PϽ0.05). Finally, administration of a C3a-receptor antagonist resulted in commensurate neurological improvement and stroke volume reduction (PϽ0.05). Together, these results establish C3 activation as the key constituent in complement-related inflammatory tissue injury following stroke and suggest a C3a anaphylatoxin-mediated mechanism. (Circ Res. 2006;99:209-217.)
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