Abstract

In 1994 a panel of the American Heart Association Stroke Council wrote guidelines on the management of patients with acute ischemic stroke.1 The panel predicted that its recommendations would change as the results of ongoing clinical trials became available. At that time the panel recommended that thrombolytic drugs should not be given to persons with acute ischemic stroke outside the clinical trial setting. Since publication of the guidelines, the results of five clinical trials of intravenously administered thrombolytic drugs have been reported.2 3 4 5 6 The use of intra-arterial thrombolytic drugs continues to be reported. In light of these data, the Stroke Council reviewed the status of thrombolytic therapy and prepared this supplement, which includes recommendations for the use of thrombolytic drugs in clinical practice. In preparing this report, panel members used the rules of evidence for treatments used during the writing of the previous report1 7 (Table 1⇓). The target audience for this statement includes neurologists, emergency physicians, primary care physicians, neurosurgeons, and vascular surgeons who care for persons seen within the first few hours after stroke. View this table: Table 1. Levels of Evidence and Grading of Recommendations for Treatment of Patients With Acute Ischemic Stroke* Measures to expedite clot lysis and restore circulation may limit the extent of brain injury and improve outcome after stroke. Unfortunately, intracranial bleeding was frequent among persons enrolled in studies performed in the late 1960s and 1970s, and the therapy was abandoned8 9 10 (Level of Evidence II). More recently, interest in thrombolytic therapy revived because of development of new drugs and their successful use in the care of persons with myocardial ischemia.11 In addition, a meta-analysis combining data from several pilot studies in stroke suggested that thrombolytic therapy might be useful.12 Available thrombolytic drugs are recombinant tissue plasminogen …

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