DIAGNOSIS
■ Clinical diagnosis, based on complete resolution of findings within 24 hours
■ Evaluation for underlying etiology includes: ECG, carotid USN, cardiac
echocardiogram (in selected patients).
TREATMENT
■ Antiplatelet agent (aspirin, clopidogrel or ticlopidine) is primary therapy.
■ Goal is prevention of stroke, based on suspected underlying process (eg,
anticoagulation if mural thrombus).
NEUROLOGY
Consider intra-arterial
thrombolysis in patients with
brainstem strokes (even in
delayed presentations).
TABLE 15.2. Criteria for Intravenous Thrombolysis in Ischemic Stroke
INCLUSION EXCLUSION*
Age 18 years or older Minor stroke symptoms
Clinical diagnosis of ischemic stroke Rapidly improving neurologic signs
Time since onset well established Prior intracranial hemorrhage
to be less than 3 hr
Blood glucose <50 mg/dL or >400 mg/dL
Seizure at onset of stroke
GI or GU bleeding within preceding 21 days
Recent myocardial infarction
Major surgery within preceding 14 days
Sustained pretreatment
SBP >185 mmHg or
DBP >110 mmHg
Previous stroke within preceding 90 days
Previous head injury within preceding 90 days
Current use of oral anticoagulants or PT >15 s or INR >1.7
Use of heparin within preceding 48 hr and a prolonged PTT
Platelet count <100,000/μL
∗Caution is advised before giving tPA to persons with severe stroke (NIH Stroke Scale Score
greater than 22).
Abbreviations:DBP = diastolic blood pressure; GI = gastrointestinal; GU = genitourinary; INR =
international normalized ratio; PT = prothombin time; PTT = partial prothrombin time; SBP =
systolic blood pressure.
(Reproduced, with permission, from Tintinalli JE, Kelen GD, Stapczynski JS. Emergency Medicine:
A Comprehensive Study Guide,6th ed. New York: McGraw-Hill, 2004:1386 based on data from
Adams HP, Brott TG, Furlan AJ, et al. Guidelines for thrombolytic therapy for acute stroke: A
supplement to the guidelines for the management of patients with acute ischemic stroke.
Circulation94:1167, 1996.)