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According to a new meta-analysis published Aug.
Study author Dr Braxton Mitchell, MPH of the University of Maryland School of Medicine in Baltimore, said: "Non-O blood types were previously thought to be associated with early stroke risk, but our meta-analysis found that these blood types were stronger linked to early stroke than late stroke, and the risk was primarily associated
This meta-analysis reviewed
The researchers examined all the chromosomes to identify genetic variants
They then divided the participants into blood
The researchers found that people who had an early stroke were more likely to have blood
When people of European ancestry were studied and compared 5825 patients with early stroke to 29320 people without stroke, the meta-analysis found that 48% of patients with early stroke had blood type A, compared to 45% of patients with advanced stroke and 44% of non-stroke patients with type A blood
After adjusting for sex and other factors, the researchers found that people with blood type A had an 18 percent
"This work deepens our understanding of early stroke development and change," said Jennifer Juhl Majersik, M.
One limitation of the study was the limited diversity of participants, although 35 percent of participants were of non-European ancestry
The study was supported by the National Institutes of Health and the Department of Veterans Affairs