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Consistently Achieving Computed Tomography to Endovascular Recanalization <90 Minutes
Author(s) -
Mayank Goyal,
Bijoy K. Me,
Michael D. Hill,
Andrew M. Demchuk
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
stroke
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.397
H-Index - 319
eISSN - 1524-4628
pISSN - 0039-2499
DOI - 10.1161/strokeaha.114.007366
Subject(s) - medicine , computed tomography , radiology , endovascular treatment , tomography , computed tomography angiography , nuclear medicine , aneurysm
Time is brain. Recent data from the Interventional Management of Stroke Trial 3 (IMS3) and other studies have provided further data to support this.1–3 Data from IMS3 suggest that a 30-minute delay in recanalization reduces the average absolute rate of a good outcome by 11%.1 Mazighi et al3 have demonstrated a relationship between delays and increased mortality. A similar analysis from the Solitaire FR Thrombectomy for Acute Revascularization (STAR) Study data set suggests a 38% relative reduction in good outcome by a 1 hour delay in recanalization.2 Rate of cell death has been estimated to be ≈2 million neurons/min in M1 occlusion.4 Currently in the United States, the mean time from symptom onset to groin puncture is 6 hours with an additional hour to achieve revascularization.5 It is clear that we as a collective need to improve overall workflow in endovascular management of acute large vessel ischemic stroke.We have demonstrated that computed tomography (CT) head to reperfusion within 60 minutes is achievable.6 However, the process of achieving this metric requires some key processes to be in place. These include the presence of an organized emergency team to evaluate and stabilize vitals, secure airway, register the patient into the hospital information system, make a complete but quick clinical assessment, understand the patient’s premorbid status, expectations of outcome, advance directives, contraindications to treatment (and participation in trials), and need for ventilation/anesthesia support. Imaging needs to be geared up toward efficiency and rapid decision making. The key imaging components are rule out an intracranial bleed (and other intracranial conditions such as a tumor or subdural hemorrhage), identify that the patient has a small core of infarction and a proximal vessel occlusion on CT angiography. Other considerations may include anatomy (does the patient have …

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