Introduction: Evidence regarding the optimal acute antiplatelet strategies in emergent endovascular therapies is scarce, and practices varies institutionally. Ticagrelor, a P2Y3B inhibitor with a lower incidence of resistance, may be effective in achieving rapid platelet inhibition. We explore the safety and efficacy of emergent Ticagrelor use in patient undergoing neurointerventions. Methods: We reviewed our database for all consecutive patients from 2016 to 2019 who received emergent administration of Ticagrelor (within 30 minutes before or after) for neuro-interventional procedures. The primary outcome measure was the incidence of major systemic hemorrhages including symptomatic intracranial hemorrhage as well as intraprocedural and post-procedural thrombotic events. Results: 81 patients were analyzed (Mean age 62±11, 70% male, 73 undergoing interventions for ischemic strokes, 8 aneurysm patients undergoing embolization). Twenty (24.7%) patients received Ticagrelor pre-puncture, 28 (35%) during and 33 (41%) after closure. Median PRU achieved in 43 patients after excluding for concomitant use of GPIIbIIIa use was 54 [36-111]. Major bleeding occurred in 7/81 patients (9.2%) - 4 gastrointestinal bleeding and 3 symptomatic ICH. Eleven (14%) patients experienced intraprocedural occlusions. Five (6.2%) cases were complicated by post-procedural occlusions while on Ticagrelor, two of which were asymptomatic. Pre-procedural Ticagrelor was associated with less frequent administration of subsequent GPIIbIIIa (OR = 0.15, 95% CI (0.03-0.64), p=0.01), as well as shorter procedure duration (Spearman’s rho 0.409, p =0.001). The use of GPIIbIIIa plus Ticagrelor was associated with increased bleeding complications (0% vs. 14%; p =0.04) than in patients receiving Ticagrelor only. Bleeding was an independently predictive risk factor for death by 3 months (OR 7.18, 95% CI (1.33-38.8, p=0.02 or 43% vs. 9.5%; p=0.04) Conclusion: Early and emergent use of Ticagrelor, prior to endovascular procedure as early as within 30 minutes, may obviate the need for administration of GPIIbIIIa. Combined use of GPIIbIIa antithrombotics with Ticagrelor was associated with hemorrhagic complications, which could contribute to increased mortality.