Having a lacunar stroke increases the risk of another stroke, dementia and loss of independence.
What is the purpose of the study?
- A quarter - 25% - of strokes, called lacunar strokes, are caused by disease of the smallest blood vessels in the brain.
- The lacunar strokes are caused when small blood vessels deep within the brain become damaged and do not supply oxygen and nutrients well.
- When there is an interruption in blood supply to part of the brain, the lacunar stroke happens. It affects about 35000 people per year in the UK.
- This ‘small vessel disease’ can also cause problems with thinking, balance and walking and can sometimes lead to dementia.
- There are no treatments yet to help the small blood vessels work better.
- As a result, damage to the brain may continue to build up.
We have found two drugs that may reduce damage to the small blood vessels in the brain and therefore could prevent strokes and thinking problems due to small vessel disease.
What drugs are tested in LACI-3?
The two LACI-3 drugs are widely used to treat other diseases but have not been used to treat small vessel disease before.
- One drug, called Cilostazol, is most commonly used in the UK to treat problems with the blood supply to the legs, but is used to prevent more strokes from happening in many other countries.
- The other drug, called Isosorbide Mononitrate, is commonly used all over the world including in the UK to treat angina (pains in the chest due to poor blood supply to the heart)
We want to test if these drugs can:
- help prevent the small vessel disease from causing another stroke or affecting the thinking skills
- if they can be used safely in patients with a lacunar stroke
- and if they can be taken over several years.