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Source: Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews
Condition: Ischemic Stroke
Therapy: Thrombolytic Therapy

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Total 4 results found since Jan 2013.

Type of anaesthesia for acute ischaemic stroke endovascular treatment
CONCLUSIONS: In early outcomes, general anaesthesia improves target artery revascularisation compared to non-general anaesthesia with moderate-certainty evidence. General anaesthesia may improve adverse events (haemodynamic instability) compared to non-general anaesthesia with low-certainty evidence. We found no evidence of a difference in neurological impairment, stroke-related mortality, all intracranial haemorrhage and haemodynamic instability adverse events between groups with low-certainty evidence. We are uncertain whether general anaesthesia improves functional outcomes and time to revascularisation because the cert...
Source: Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews - July 20, 2022 Category: General Medicine Authors: Renato Tosello Rachel Riera Giuliano Tosello Caroline Nb Clezar Jorge E Amorim Vladimir Vasconcelos Benedito B Joao Ronald Lg Flumignan Source Type: research

Percutaneous vascular interventions versus intravenous thrombolytic treatment for acute ischaemic stroke.
CONCLUSIONS: The present review directly compared intravenous thrombolytic treatment with percutaneous vascular interventions for ischaemic stroke. We found no evidence from RCTs that percutaneous vascular interventions are superior to intravenous thrombolytic treatment with respect to functional outcome. Quality of evidence was low (outcome assessment was blinded, but not the treating physician or participants). New trials with adequate sample sizes are warranted because of the rapid development of new techniques and devices for such interventions. PMID: 30365156 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]
Source: Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews - October 26, 2018 Category: General Medicine Authors: Lindekleiv H, Berge E, Bruins Slot KM, Wardlaw JM Tags: Cochrane Database Syst Rev Source Type: research

Thrombolysis for acute ischaemic stroke.
CONCLUSIONS: Thrombolytic therapy given up to six hours after stroke reduces the proportion of dead or dependent people. Those treated within the first three hours derive substantially more benefit than with later treatment. This overall benefit was apparent despite an increase in symptomatic intracranial haemorrhage, deaths at seven to 10 days, and deaths at final follow-up (except for trials testing rt-PA, which had no effect on death at final follow-up). Further trials are needed to identify the latest time window, whether people with mild stroke benefit from thrombolysis, to find ways of reducing symptomatic intracrani...
Source: Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews - August 3, 2014 Category: Journals (General) Authors: Wardlaw JM, Murray V, Berge E, Del Zoppo GJ Tags: Cochrane Database Syst Rev Source Type: research