• Stroke · May 2002

    Case Reports Clinical Trial

    Acute basilar artery occlusion treated with combined intravenous Abciximab and intra-arterial tissue plasminogen activator: report of 3 cases.

    • Bernd Eckert, Christoph Koch, Götz Thomalla, Joachim Roether, and Herrmann Zeumer.
    • Department of Neuroradiology, University Hospital Hamburg-Eppendorf, Hamburg, Germany. b.eckert@uke.uni-hamburg.de
    • Stroke. 2002 May 1;33(5):1424-7.

    BackgroundAcute vertebrobasilar occlusion remains a disease with a high mortality even after treatment by local intra-arterial fibrinolysis. Adjunctive treatment with platelet glycoprotein IIb/IIIa receptor inhibitors such as abciximab may facilitate recanalization and improve the neurological outcome. Results after treatment of 3 patients by combined intravenous abciximab and local intra-arterial tissue plasminogen activator (tPA) are reported.Case DescriptionsTreatment was performed within 6 hours of stroke onset. Angiography revealed embolic occlusion of the basilar artery in 2 patients and atherothrombotic occlusion at the vertebrobasilar junction in 1 patient. Therapy consisted of intravenous abciximab bolus administration (0.25 mg/kg) followed by 12-hour infusion therapy (0.125 microg/kg per minute) and local intra-arterial thrombolysis with tPA (10 mg/h). Heparin was only applied for catheter flushing (500 IU/h). The patient with the atherothrombotic occlusion was treated with additional percutaneous transluminal angioplasty and stenting. Complete recanalization of the basilar artery occurred in 2 patients, whose conditions improved clinically to functional independence. In the third patient only partial recanalization was seen, with only slight clinical improvement. This patient died of cardiac failure 2 months later. Besides a subtle subarachnoid hemorrhage (n=1), no intracranial or extracranial bleeding complication was observed.ConclusionsThe combination of glycoprotein IIb/IIIa receptor inhibitor with local intra-arterial tPA might be a promising therapy for patients with acute vertebrobasilar occlusion. Further studies are necessary to define the clinical benefit and the bleeding rate of this new pharmacological approach.

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