4.7 Article

Arterial reocclusion in stroke patients treated with intravenous tissue plasminogen activator

Journal

NEUROLOGY
Volume 59, Issue 6, Pages 862-867

Publisher

LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS
DOI: 10.1212/WNL.59.6.862

Keywords

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Funding

  1. NINDS NIH HHS [1 K23 NS02229-01] Funding Source: Medline

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Background: Arterial reocclusion has not been systematically studied despite the fact that 13% of patients in the National Institute of Neurological Diseases and Stroke rt-PA Trial deteriorated following initial improvement, suggesting that reocclusion might be responsible for poor clinical outcome in some of these patients. Methods: Consecutive stroke patients treated with IV tissue plasminogen activator (TPA) within 3 hours and an M1 or M2 middle cerebral artery (MCA) occlusion on pre-TPA transcranial Doppler (TCD) were monitored up to 2 hours after TPA bolus. Reocclusion was defined as the Thrombolysis in Brain Ischemia flow decrease by greater than or equal to1 grades and no hemorrhage on repeat CT. The NIH Stroke Scale (NIHSS) and modified Rankin Scores (mRS) were obtained by a neurologist independently of TCD. Results: Sixty patients with median prebolus NIHSS score of 16 (range 6 to 28, 90% with greater than or equal to10 points) had TPA bolus at 130 +/- 32 minutes (median 120 minutes, 58% within the first 2 hours). Recanalization was complete in 18 (30%), partial in 29 (48%), and none in 13 (22%) patients. Reocclusion occurred in 34% of patients with any initial recanalization (16/47): in 4 of 16 patients with complete recanalization (22%), and in 12 of 29 patients with partial recanalization (41%). Reocclusion was detected in four patients (25%) before TPA bolus, in three (19%) by 30 minutes after bolus, in three (19%) by the end of infusion, and in six (37%) by 60 to 120 minutes. Before reocclusion, those patients had earlier median timing of recanalization: 130 versus 180 minutes after stroke onset compared with those who recanalized without reocclusion (p = 0.01). Median prebolus NIHSS score in the reocclusion group was 13.5 versus 17 (rest, NS), whereas at 2 and 24 hours, their NIHSS scores were higher: 14 versus 9 and 16 versus 6 points (p less than or equal to 0.04). Deterioration followed by improvement by greater than or equal to4 NIHSS points occurred in 8 of 16 (50%) patients with reocclusion versus 10% (rest) (p < 0.05). In-hospital mortality was 25 versus 3% (p < 0.0001). At 3 months, good outcome (mRS, score of 0 to 1) was achieved by 8% of patients with no recanalization, by 33% of patients with reocclusion, and by 50% of patients with stable recanalization (p less than or equal to 0.05), and mortality was 42% with no early recanalization, 33% after reocclusion, and 8% in patients with stable recanalization (p less than or equal to 0.05). Conclusions: Early reocclusion occurs in 34% of TPA-treated patients with any initial recanalization, accounting for two-thirds of deteriorations following improvement. Reocclusion occurs more often in patients with earlier and partial recanalization, leading to neurologic deterioration and higher in-hospital mortality. However, patients with reocclusion have better long-term outcomes than patients without any early recanalization.

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