| Literature DB >> 29636943 |
Quentin Binet1, Frank D Hammer2, Olivia Rocrelle3, André Peeters3, Christophe Scavée4, Cedric Hermans1.
Abstract
Patients presenting with an acute ischemic stroke despite dabigatran therapy (last intake <24 h or unknown) should be evaluated for reversal by idarucizumab, making them eligible for safe and effective intravenous thrombolysis. It has been shown to be feasible, well-tolerated, and easy to manage in an emergency room or stroke unit.Entities:
Keywords: Acute ischemic stroke; dabigatran etexilate; idarucizumab; thrombectomy; thrombolysis
Year: 2018 PMID: 29636943 PMCID: PMC5889252 DOI: 10.1002/ccr3.1446
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Case Rep ISSN: 2050-0904
Figure 1Time course of events.
Figure 2Cerebral imaging. (A) Head and neck CT angiography in acute setting showed an absence of opacification of the cervical segment of the left internal carotid artery. (B) Head CT angiography in acute setting revealed a hyperacute middle cerebral artery occlusion. (C) Follow‐up noncontrast CT on day 1 showed a left lenticulostriate infarct without hemorrhagic transformation.
Hemostasis testing before (1) and after (2) idarucizumab administration. Abnormal values are written in italic letters
| Blood sample 1 (9:54 | Blood sample 2 (10:57 | Reference values and units | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Activated Partial Thromboplastin Time (aPTT) |
| 27.5 | 25.1–36.5 sec |
| International Normalized Ratio (INR) | 1.18 | 1.14 | 0.80–1.20 |
| Prothrombin time | 13.80 | 13.30 | 9.35–14.30 sec |
| Thrombin time |
| 14.2 | 10.0–18.0 sec |
| Fibrinogen |
|
| 150–450 mg/dL |
| D‐dimers | <250 | 355 | <500 ng/mL |
| Dabigatran | 61.4 | 0.9 | ng/mL |