The data of this study demonstrate some cerebrovascular and biochemical features in patients with recurrent strokes. Thus, the rheoencephalogram was deeply altered in a way typical of cerebral arteriosclerosis, the autoregulation of cerebral circulation was impaired on a background of higher diastolic arterial blood pressure, serum fibrinogen level was higher too, all these alterations pointing
... [Show full abstract] to these patients as 'active', according to the classification of cerebrovascular patients made by Marshall and Kaeser (this category includes the patients who develop recurrent cerebral strokes). These traits appeared in these patients in a significantly higher percentage than in a comparative group of patients with stroke who had not developed further strokes for at least 5 years ('inactive group'). Taking into account these data is important, for the age at death in patients with recurrent strokes who had their first stroke between 41 and 60 is under the mean age at death in patients of the 'inactive' group.