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Vaccination may replace oral blood-thinning drugs to reduce the risk of secondary stroke, according to a new Japanese study.

"Many stroke patients do not pre-emptively coagulate, which makes them more likely to develop a new stroke. Vaccination may one day resolve this request," he emphasized, Year after year, clinical trials of the vaccine may begin, but there are differences between mice and humans about how the immune system recognizes vaccination. We need to solve this problem, and I think this vaccine is a very valuable strategy for secondary stroke prevention, he added.
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