Overview
The investigators evaluated the impact of AF on different subtypes of post-alteplase hemorrhagic transformation of brain infarction.
Description
Investigators conducted a prospective cohort study between July 2021 and July 2023. They screened 1550 patients who presented with AIS and received alteplase and included 716 AIS patients who met the inclusion criteria and were diagnosed based on a thorough clinical assessment, including a detailed medical history, physical examination, and specific brain imaging results and treated with alteplase within four and half hours of stroke onset.
The investigators assessed the patients' follow-up brain imaging to detect the subtypes of hemorrhagic transformation after receiving alteplase.
The study consisted of two distinct groups. The first group consisted of 454 patients who did not experience hemorrhagic infarction, while the second group comprised 262 patients who experienced hemorrhagic infarction.
The investigators evaluated whether the characteristics of ischemic stroke patients, door-to-needle time, and stroke risk factors different types of AF were predictive variables for different subtypes of post-alteplase hemorrhagic transformation of brain infarction.
Eligibility
Inclusion Criteria:
- The investigators enrolled individuals of both genders, aged between 18 and 75,
- All patients had acute first-ever embolic ischemic stroke and were eligible for thrombolysis.
- All patients had Atrial fibrillation
Exclusion Criteria:
- The investigators excluded patients who had alteplase contraindications
- The investigators excluded patients who did not receive the total dose of alteplase for any reason.
- The investigators excluded patients who had a known history of persistent or recurrent CNS pathology (e.g., epilepsy, meningioma, multiple sclerosis)
- The investigators excluded patients who had recurrent ischemic stroke diagnosed by appropriate clinical history and/or MRI brain findings.
- The investigators excluded patients with symptoms of major organ failure, active malignancies, or an acute myocardial infarction within the previous six weeks.
- The investigators also excluded pregnant and lactating patients with stroke due to venous thrombosis and stroke following cardiac arrest.