It's very obvious here that there is NO PROTOCOL for this, so stroke patients are at the whims of their ER doctors. Hope your whimsical doctor makes the right choice for you to be on the path to 100% recovery.
Worldwide Survey on Approach to Thrombolysis in Acute Ischemic Stroke With Large Vessel Occlusion
Abstract
Background and Objectives
With
recent trials suggesting that endovascular thrombectomy (EVT) alone may
be noninferior to combined intravenous thrombolysis (IVT) with
alteplase and EVT and that tenecteplase is non-inferior to alteplase in
treating acute ischemic stroke, we sought to understand current
practices around the world for treating acute ischemic stroke with large
vessel occlusion (LVO) depending on the center of practice (IVT-capable
vs IVT and EVT-capable stroke center).
Methods
The
electronic survey launched by the Practice Current section of
Neurology: Clinical Practice included 6 clinical and 8 demographic
questions. A single-case scenario was presented of a 65-year-old man
presenting with right hemiplegia with aphasia with a duration of 1 hour.
Imaging showed left M1-MCA occlusion with no early ischemic changes.
The respondents were asked about their treatment approach in 2 settings:
the patient presented to (1) the IVT-only capable center and (2) the
IVT and EVT-capable center. They were also asked about the thrombolytic
agent of choice in current and ideal circumstances for these settings.
Results
A
total of 203 physicians (42.9% vascular neurologists) from 44 countries
completed the survey. Most participants (55.2%) spent ≥50% of their
time delivering stroke care. The survey results showed that in current
practice, more than 90% of respondents would offer IVT + EVT to patients
with LVO stroke presenting to either an EVT-capable (91.1%) or
IVT-only–capable center (93.6%). Although nearly 80% currently use
alteplase for thrombolysis, around 60% would ideally like to switch to
tenecteplase independent of the practice setting. These results were
similar between stroke and non-stroke neurologists.
Discussion
Most
physicians prefer IVT before EVT in patients with acute ischemic stroke
attributable to large vessel occlusion independent of the practice
setting.
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