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      Acute Stroke Treatment 

      Surgery for acute stroke

      edited-book
      , , ,
      CRC Press

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          Most cited references31

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          Intra-arterial thrombolytic therapy improves outcome in patients with acute vertebrobasilar occlusive disease.

          In this retrospective analysis we report our treatment experience in 65 consecutive patients with clinical signs of severe brainstem ischemia with angiographically demonstrated thrombotic vertebrobasilar artery occlusions who received either local intra-arterial thrombolytic therapy (urokinase or streptokinase) (43 patients) or conventional therapy (antiplatelet agents or anticoagulants) (22 patients). We analyzed the data with respect to cerebral artery occlusion patterns, posttreatment arterial recanalization, and the clinical categories of favorable/unfavorable outcome and survival/death. In subgroup analyses, recanalization in patients who received thrombolytic therapy correlated significantly with clinical outcome; in 19 of 43 patients, recanalization was demonstrated angiographically, while in 24 patients the occlusion persisted. All patients without recanalization died, but 14 of the 19 patients displaying recanalization survived (p = 0.000007), 10 with a favorable clinical outcome. Only three of the 22 patients who received conventional therapy survived, all with a moderate clinical deficit. When we compared the treatment groups, highly significant differences in both outcome quality (p = 0.017) and survival (p = 0.0005) were found to depend on establishing recanalization. Our data support the concept that technically successful thrombolysis of vertebrobasilar artery occlusions is associated with beneficial clinical outcome.
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            Prediction of malignant middle cerebral artery infarction by diffusion-weighted imaging.

            This study was designed to analyze whether early diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI) provides reliable quantitative information for the prediction of stroke patients at risk of malignant brain infarct. We selected 28 patients with a middle cerebral artery (MCA) infarct and proven MCA or carotid T occlusion on DWI and MRI angiography performed within 14 hours after onset (mean 6.5+/-3.5 hours, median 5.2 hours). Of these, 10 patients developed malignant MCA infarct, whereas 18 did not. For the 2 groups, we compared the National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale (NIHSS) score at admission, site of arterial occlusion, standardized visual analysis of DWI abnormalities, quantitative volume measurement of DWI abnormalities (volume(DWI)), and apparent diffusion coefficient values. Univariate and multivariate discriminant analysis was used to determine the most accurate predictors of malignant MCA infarct. Univariate analysis showed that an admission NIHSS score >20, total versus partial MCA infarct, and volume(DWI) >145 cm(3) were highly significant predictors of malignant infarct. The best predictor was volume(DWI) >145 cm(3), which achieved 100% sensitivity and 94% specificity. Prediction was further improved by bivariate models combining volume(DWI) and apparent diffusion coefficient measurements, which reached 100% sensitivity and specificity in this series of patients. Quantitative measurement of infarct volume on DWI is an accurate method for the prediction of malignant MCA infarct in patients with persistent arterial occlusion imaged within 14 hours of onset. This may be of importance for early management of severe stroke patients.
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              Dissecting aneurysms of the intracranial vertebral artery.

              Among 86 patients with aneurysms arising from the vertebral artery or its branches, 24 had dissecting aneurysms. The patients with dissecting aneurysms were characteristically relatively young males. Twenty-one patients presented with subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH) and three with ischemia. Severe headache or neck pain occurred in all three patients with ischemia. Five of the 21 patients with SAH and all three patients with ischemia experienced recurrent episodes. Angiography typically showed fusiform dilatation and proximal and/or distal narrowing of the affected artery. The difficulty of diagnosing this disorder is pointed out. Surgery was performed in 19 patients, the most common technique being clip-occlusion of the proximal vertebral artery. There were no postoperative deaths or rebleeding; a lateral medullary syndrome developed in three patients. The observation at surgery of intramural clot with characteristic discoloration was limited to the cases operated on within 36 days after the ictus. After this period, the aneurysm was whitish gray in color and had become firm. Of 36 other cases of vertebral dissecting aneurysm reported in the literature, 20 were operated on. The indications for surgery are discussed.
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                Author and book information

                Book Chapter
                July 24 2003
                April 26 2013
                : 209-232
                10.1201/b14341-15
                af56d7a5-069e-4233-ac67-cb493aaf29c7
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