Thrombolytic therapy was carried out on patients with acute ischemic stroke, and the risk of hemorrhagic transformation was evaluated from the residual cerebral blood flow (CBF) by pretherapeutic single-photon emission-computed tomography (SPECT).
Local intra-arterial thrombolytic therapy was carried out using urokinase or recombinant tissue plasminogen activator (rt-PA) within 6 hours from the onset in 34 patients in whom no hypodensity areas were observed on the initial computed tomography examination. In the 20 patients with carotid territory occlusion who underwent 99mTc-labeled hexamethylpropyleneamine oxime (99mTc-HMPAO) SPECT, the residual CBF of the ischemic region was evaluated semiquantitatively by calculating two parameters: the ischemic regional activity to cerebellar activity ratio (R/CE ratio) and asymmetry index (AI).
The occluded vessels could be recanalized in 22 (92%) of the 24 patients in the urokinase group and in all 10 of the patients in the rt-PA group. Hemorrhagic transformation appeared in 4 patients in the urokinase group and 3 patients in the rt-PA group. Among the 20 patients who underwent SPECT before the treatment, the residual CBF was lower in the 5 patients who developed hemorrhagic transformation than in the 15 who did not (P < .05). Hemorrhagic transformation occurred in all patients with R/CE ratio of less than 0.35 and AI of more than 1.5.
The risk of hemorrhagic transformation after recanalization of occluded vessels by local intra-arterial thrombolytic therapy was considered to be high when the pretherapeutic residual CBF was markedly reduced.
There are no data concerning the incidence of provoked coronary arterial spasms via intracoronary administration of ergonovine (ER). This study sought to establish the incidence of spasms due to intracoronary injection of ER in Japanese patients who underwent coronary angiography. The subjects were 596 consecutive patients (369 men, mean age 64.2 +/- 10.3 years) who were studied with a selective ER test. ER was administered in total doses of 40 microg into the right coronary artery and 64 microg into the left coronary artery. A positive spasm was defined as a total or subtotal occlusion. Coronary vasospasms were determined in 173 patients (29.0%). Spasms occurred often in patients with ischemic heart disease (43.3%); during effort and rest in patients with angina (46.3%), exertional angina (27.7%), recent myocardial infarction (36.7%), healed myocardial infarction (34.1%), and especially in patients with rest angina (55.5%), but were relatively uncommon in patients with nonischemic heart disease (3.7%). The incidence of provoked coronary spasms in this study was 2.2-2.6 times higher than in previous reports with intravenous ER administration. More spasms were superimposed on significant atherosclerotic lesions than on nonfixed atherosclerotic lesions (42.8% vs 24.0%, p < 0.01). No serious or irreversible complications were observed in this study. In conclusion, intracoronary administration of ER was a safe and reliable test. Compared with Caucasian patients, in Japanese patients, coronary arterial spasms occurred 2-3 times more frequently with various cardiac disorders.
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