Stroke, Vol 20, 1674-1679, Copyright © 1989 by American Heart Association
EF Wijdicks, D Hasan, KW Lindsay, PJ Brouwers, R Hatfield, GD Murray, J van Gijn and M Vermeulen
Antifibrinolytic treatment for 4 weeks after a subarachnoid hemorrhage has
been shown to have no effect on outcome since a reduction in the rate of
rebleeding was offset by an increase in ischemic events. To determine if a
shorter course (4 days) of antifibrinolytic treatment before the expected
onset of ischemic complications might reduce the rate of rebleeding yet
avoid ischemic complications, we prospectively studied a series of 119
patients with subarachnoid hemorrhage; 479 patients with subarachnoid
hemorrhage from our previous randomized double-blind study (238 treated
with placebo, 241 with long-term tranexamic acid) served as historical
control groups. At 3 months' follow-up, the outcome of patients treated
with short-term tranexamic acid was not different from that of patients
treated with long-term tranexamic acid. The rate of rebleeding (24 of 119,
20%) was near that with placebo (56 of 238, 24%). In contrast, the rate of
cerebral infarction (33 of 119, 28%) was almost identical to that after
long- term tranexamic acid (59 of 241, 24%), although mortality from
cerebral infarction was reduced. Compared with historical control groups,
treatment with tranexamic acid for 4 days fails to reduce the incidence of
rebleeding but still increases the rate of cerebral infarction.
ARTICLES
Short-term tranexamic acid treatment in aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage
University Department of Neurology, Utrecht, The Netherlands.
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