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Early blood pressure changes during systemic thrombolysis and its association with unexplained early neurological deterioration in small subcortical infarct
Author(s) -
Wei Xiu'e,
Duan Zuowei,
Zhai Yujia,
Zhang Cuicui,
Zhang Jun,
Hu Ting,
Liu Tengfei,
Liu Zhenqian,
Xu Jiang,
Liu Haiyan,
Rong Liangqun
Publication year - 2022
Publication title -
the journal of clinical hypertension
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.909
H-Index - 67
eISSN - 1751-7176
pISSN - 1524-6175
DOI - 10.1111/jch.14515
Subject(s) - medicine , thrombolysis , cardiology , blood pressure , logistic regression , myocardial infarction
Early neurological deterioration (END), observed in the acute phase of small subcortical infarct treated with intravenous thrombolysis (IVT), is not uncommon in these patients. However, in over half of the END cases, the exact cause is yet incompletely understood, which is so‐called unexplained END (unEND). Our aim was to investigate the association of early blood pressure (BP) changes with unEND in patients with small subcortical infarct in the perforator territory of middle cerebral artery treated with IVT. Consecutive patients with acute small subcortical infarct treated with IVT were enrolled in this study. unEND was defined as≧2‐point increase of NIHSS from baseline to 24 hours, without straightforward causes. BP excursions and BP variability were calculated and compared between patients with unNED and those without. A total of 168 patients with acute small subcortical infarct were included. Of them, there were 29 patients with unEND and 139 without END. During the first 24 hours following IVT, 66 (39.29%) patients had at least one BP excursion. Logistic regression analyses indicated that BP excursion presence (OR = 3.185, 95% CI: 1.238‐8.198), SBP excursion presence (OR = 3.535, 95% CI: 1.366‐9.143), and number of SBP excursion (OR = 1.466, 95% CI: 1.090‐1.973) were independently associated with unEND. Although SBP SD ( P  < .001) and SBP CV ( P  < .001) were higher in patients with unEND than those without END, none of the parameters of BP variability predicted unEND in multivariate analyses. BP excursions above guideline thresholds during the first 24 hours following IVT for small subcortical infarct are common and are independently associated with unEND.

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