Intravenous thrombolysis and mechanical thrombectomy in patients with minor or rapidly improving neurological deficits

Purpose of review A substantial proportion of patients with ischemic stroke present with mild neurological deficits ('Stroke with mild symptoms,’ SMS). Treating these patients with thrombolysis or with thrombectomy is controversial and clinical practice is different. We will highlight the importance of these treatment decisions by reviewing the recent advances in this area. Recent findings Intravenous thrombolysis with recombinant tissue plasminogen activator in patients with SMS showed a significant reduction in functional disability after 3 months. Treatment with tenecteplase seems to be a pharmacologically superior and possibly safer thrombolytic agent making it ideal for use in this patient group. Imaging criteria to select the profiting patients are evolving. Thrombectomy in patients with a large vessel occlusion and minor deficits are showing promising results in cohort studies so far, however, randomized controlled trials are lacking. Summary Patients with acute ischemic stroke and minor or rapidly improving symptoms should be carefully treated the same way as more severe strokes are treated as neurological deterioration is not infrequent. Nevertheless, treatment decisions should be individualized dependent on clinical and radiological features.
Source: Current Opinion in Neurology - Category: Neurology Tags: CEREBROVASCULAR DISEASE: Edited by Didier Leys Source Type: research