Stroke: Vascular and Interventional Neurology (Nov 2023)
Abstract 213: Successful Mechanical Thrombectomy in Acute Stroke With Pre‐interventional Thrombolysis‐Induced Intracerebral Hemorrhage: Case Report
Abstract
Introduction Intravenous thrombolytics (IVT) and mechanical thrombectomy (MT) have become the standards of care for treating patients with large vessel occlusion (LVO) acute ischemic strokes (AIS) [1‐4}. Intracerebral hemorrhage (ICH) is a main complication of IVT, with prevalence reported around 3.2% in a large multicentered meta‐analysis [2,6]. However, limited data remains about the safety and efficacy for patients to undergo MT with IVT associated pre‐interventional ICH as no randomized control trials or standard of care guidelines are available [2,4,5,7]. Methods NA Results 56‐yo male with history of alcohol abuse presented via EMS as a stroke alert with acute onset right hemiplegia, global aphasia, right facial droop, and leftward gaze preference two hours prior to arrival. RACE 10+ with NIHSS 24. No known history antiplatelet or anticoagulation use. Computerized Tomography (CT) Brain scan showed left middle cerebral artery (MCA) hyperdense sign with left insular cortical ribboning. CT angiography (CTA) showed near occlusive stenosis of the left carotid bulb with an acute thrombus within Supraclinoid Internal Carotid Artery (ICA) extending into the Left MCA and origin of Left Anterior Cerebral Artery (ACA). Patient was emergently administered IV‐tissue Plasminogen Activator (IV‐tPA) and taken for endovascular thrombectomy. During initial angiogram, after crossing the stenotic cervical bulb, the left Supraclinoid ICA and MCA occlusions were visualized. There was longitudinal partially occlusive thrombus extending from the M1 into the M2 divisions. No opacification of the inferior M2 branch was visualized, with perfusion deficit over the temporal, parietal and frontal regions. Additionally, extravasation of contrast was seen within the left basal ganglia region, concerning for hemorrhagic transformation from IV‐tPA. Reversal of IV‐tPA was initiated, and patient was given cryoprecipitate, platelets, and tranexamic acid. Decision to undergo MT was made secondary to severity of debilitating neurologic symptoms, age, and large perfusion deficit observed. He underwent single pass complete recanalization, TICI 2C using Stent retriever and aspiration. Left ICA stenting was not completed secondary to hemorrhagic transformation. Repeat CT Brain confirmed moderate left frontal lobe hemorrhage with vasogenic edema and 3mm left‐to‐right midline shift. No neurosurgical intervention required. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) Brain showed left cerebral hematoma with mass effect, acute infarct within left caudate nucleus, and minimal posterior cortical restricted diffusion without hemorrhagic conversion. Patient was monitored for 1 week with serial brain imaging. Patient was discharged on Aspirin 81 mg daily to inpatient rehabilitation with NIHSS 21, mRS 4 (0 prestroke). Today, in rehab he ambulates with walker with moderate expressive aphasia and right upper extremity weakness. Plan to follow‐up 2‐month post‐hospitalization for left ICA stenting. Conclusion While pre‐interventional IVT‐associated ICH in AIS with LVO are rare, few cases have been shown to have positive neurological outcomes [2,5,7]. We demonstrate a unique case of early identification of reperfusion hemorrhage on fluoroscopy with prompt reversal initiated. The decision to continue with MT based on downstream occlusion of basal ganglia hemorrhage not at further risk of expansion from reperfusion. The patient did well on follow‐up imaging despite the hemorrhage. Further randomized control clinical trials are required to establish best care guidelines, safety, and efficacy.