Blood Pressure Management for Ischemic Stroke in the First 24 Hours

High blood pressure (BP) is common after ischemic stroke and associated with a poor functional outcome and increased mortality. The conundrum then arises on whether to lower BP to improve outcome or whether this will worsen cerebral perfusion due to aberrant cerebral autoregulation. A number of larg...

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Veröffentlicht in:Stroke (1970) 2022-04, Vol.53 (4), p.1074-1084
Hauptverfasser: Bath, Philip M., Song, Lili, Silva, Gisele S., Mistry, Eva, Petersen, Nils, Tsivgoulis, Georgios, Mazighi, Mikael, Bang, Oh Young, Sandset, Else Charlotte
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container_end_page 1084
container_issue 4
container_start_page 1074
container_title Stroke (1970)
container_volume 53
creator Bath, Philip M.
Song, Lili
Silva, Gisele S.
Mistry, Eva
Petersen, Nils
Tsivgoulis, Georgios
Mazighi, Mikael
Bang, Oh Young
Sandset, Else Charlotte
description High blood pressure (BP) is common after ischemic stroke and associated with a poor functional outcome and increased mortality. The conundrum then arises on whether to lower BP to improve outcome or whether this will worsen cerebral perfusion due to aberrant cerebral autoregulation. A number of large trials of BP lowering have failed to change outcome whether treatment was started prehospital in the community or hospital. Hence, nuances on how to manage high BP are likely, including whether different interventions are needed for different causes, the type and timing of the drug, how quickly BP is lowered, and the collateral effects of the drug, including on cerebral perfusion and platelets. Specific scenarios are also important, including when to lower BP before, during, and after intravenous thrombolysis and endovascular therapy/thrombectomy, when it may be necessary to raise BP, and when antihypertensive drugs taken before stroke should be restarted. This narrative review addresses these and other questions. Although further large trials are ongoing, it is increasingly likely that there is no simple answer. Different subgroups of patients may need to have their BP lowered (eg, before or after thrombolysis), left alone, or elevated.
doi_str_mv 10.1161/STROKEAHA.121.036143
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The conundrum then arises on whether to lower BP to improve outcome or whether this will worsen cerebral perfusion due to aberrant cerebral autoregulation. A number of large trials of BP lowering have failed to change outcome whether treatment was started prehospital in the community or hospital. Hence, nuances on how to manage high BP are likely, including whether different interventions are needed for different causes, the type and timing of the drug, how quickly BP is lowered, and the collateral effects of the drug, including on cerebral perfusion and platelets. Specific scenarios are also important, including when to lower BP before, during, and after intravenous thrombolysis and endovascular therapy/thrombectomy, when it may be necessary to raise BP, and when antihypertensive drugs taken before stroke should be restarted. This narrative review addresses these and other questions. Although further large trials are ongoing, it is increasingly likely that there is no simple answer. 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source MEDLINE; Alma/SFX Local Collection; EZB Electronic Journals Library; American Heart Association; Journals@Ovid Complete
subjects Antihypertensive Agents
Blood Pressure - physiology
Brain Ischemia - drug therapy
Humans
Hypertension - drug therapy
Hypertension - etiology
Ischemic Stroke
Stroke
Treatment Outcome
title Blood Pressure Management for Ischemic Stroke in the First 24 Hours
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