Laura Catherine Gioia, George Nunes Mendes, Alexandre Yves Poppe, Christian Stapf
{"title":"Advances in Prehospital Management of Intracerebral Hemorrhage.","authors":"Laura Catherine Gioia, George Nunes Mendes, Alexandre Yves Poppe, Christian Stapf","doi":"10.1159/000537998","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p><strong>Background: </strong>Spontaneous acute intracerebral hemorrhage (ICH) is associated with greater stroke-related disability and mortality. Hematoma expansion (HME), an important treatment target in acute ICH, is time-dependent, with a greater probability of hematoma growth occurring <3 hours from ICH onset.</p><p><strong>Summary: </strong>Promising treatment options to reduce HME include early intensive blood pressure (BP) reduction and the administration of hemostatic or anticoagulant reversal agents, yet large phase III clinical trials have so far failed to show overwhelming benefit for these interventions in acute ICH. Post-hoc analyses provide evidence, however, that the therapeutic benefit of such treatments is enhanced by rapid and ultra-early intervention, likely driven in large part by attenuation of early HME. Clinical trials assessing ultra-rapid treatments (<2 hours from ICH onset), including study procedures in the ambulance setting are currently underway, and demonstrate that the prehospital phase is a critical window for ICH management and an indispensable area of ICH research. Mobile stroke units, specialized ambulances equipped with imaging capabilities can provide confirmatory diagnosis and expedite treatments, as in acute ischemic stroke. Nevertheless, multiple barriers (financial, organisational, geographical among others) hinder worldwide implementation. Emerging portable technologies as well as point-of-care measures of blood biomarkers show promise as feasible adjunct tools to discriminate ICH from AIS in the field and have the potential for widespread accessibility.</p><p><strong>Key messages: </strong>Ultra-early interventions in acute ICH are likely necessary to mitigate the risk of HME, and as such, the prehospital setting is ideal to initiate time-sensitive ICH therapies. As such, reliable prehospital acute ICH detection is essential to provide disease-specific treatments. Overall, it is imperative that \"Time is brain\" become the mantra not only for ischemic stroke but for ICH as well, and that the promise of ultra-early therapies for ICH be translated into concrete benefits for patients with this devastating condition.</p>","PeriodicalId":9683,"journal":{"name":"Cerebrovascular Diseases","volume":" ","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":2.2000,"publicationDate":"2024-03-07","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Cerebrovascular Diseases","FirstCategoryId":"3","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1159/000537998","RegionNum":3,"RegionCategory":"医学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q3","JCRName":"CLINICAL NEUROLOGY","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
Background: Spontaneous acute intracerebral hemorrhage (ICH) is associated with greater stroke-related disability and mortality. Hematoma expansion (HME), an important treatment target in acute ICH, is time-dependent, with a greater probability of hematoma growth occurring <3 hours from ICH onset.
Summary: Promising treatment options to reduce HME include early intensive blood pressure (BP) reduction and the administration of hemostatic or anticoagulant reversal agents, yet large phase III clinical trials have so far failed to show overwhelming benefit for these interventions in acute ICH. Post-hoc analyses provide evidence, however, that the therapeutic benefit of such treatments is enhanced by rapid and ultra-early intervention, likely driven in large part by attenuation of early HME. Clinical trials assessing ultra-rapid treatments (<2 hours from ICH onset), including study procedures in the ambulance setting are currently underway, and demonstrate that the prehospital phase is a critical window for ICH management and an indispensable area of ICH research. Mobile stroke units, specialized ambulances equipped with imaging capabilities can provide confirmatory diagnosis and expedite treatments, as in acute ischemic stroke. Nevertheless, multiple barriers (financial, organisational, geographical among others) hinder worldwide implementation. Emerging portable technologies as well as point-of-care measures of blood biomarkers show promise as feasible adjunct tools to discriminate ICH from AIS in the field and have the potential for widespread accessibility.
Key messages: Ultra-early interventions in acute ICH are likely necessary to mitigate the risk of HME, and as such, the prehospital setting is ideal to initiate time-sensitive ICH therapies. As such, reliable prehospital acute ICH detection is essential to provide disease-specific treatments. Overall, it is imperative that "Time is brain" become the mantra not only for ischemic stroke but for ICH as well, and that the promise of ultra-early therapies for ICH be translated into concrete benefits for patients with this devastating condition.
背景:自发性急性脑内出血(ICH)与中风相关的致残率和死亡率增加有关。血肿扩大(HME)是急性 ICH 的一个重要治疗目标,它具有时间依赖性,血肿扩大的可能性更大 摘要:减少 HME 的可行治疗方案包括早期强化降压(BP)和使用止血剂或抗凝剂逆转剂,但迄今为止,大型 III 期临床试验未能显示这些干预措施对急性 ICH 有压倒性的益处。不过,事后分析提供的证据表明,快速和超早期干预可增强此类治疗的疗效,这在很大程度上可能是由于早期 HME 的减弱所致。评估超早期治疗方法的临床试验(关键信息:对急性 ICH 进行超早期干预可能是降低 HME 风险所必需的,因此院前环境是启动时效性 ICH 治疗的理想场所。因此,可靠的院前急性 ICH 检测对于提供疾病特异性治疗至关重要。总之,"时间就是大脑 "不仅要成为缺血性中风的口头禅,也要成为 ICH 的口头禅,并将 ICH 超早期疗法的承诺转化为对这种毁灭性疾病患者的具体益处。
期刊介绍:
A rapidly-growing field, stroke and cerebrovascular research is unique in that it involves a variety of specialties such as neurology, internal medicine, surgery, radiology, epidemiology, cardiology, hematology, psychology and rehabilitation. ''Cerebrovascular Diseases'' is an international forum which meets the growing need for sophisticated, up-to-date scientific information on clinical data, diagnostic testing, and therapeutic issues, dealing with all aspects of stroke and cerebrovascular diseases. It contains original contributions, reviews of selected topics and clinical investigative studies, recent meeting reports and work-in-progress as well as discussions on controversial issues. All aspects related to clinical advances are considered, while purely experimental work appears if directly relevant to clinical issues.