Antiplatelets Versus Anticoagulation in Cervical Artery Dissection

Stefan T. Engelter(Heidelberg University), Tobias Brandt(Heidelberg University), Stéphanie Debette(Heidelberg University), Valeria Caso(Heidelberg University), Christoph Lichy(Heidelberg University), Alessandro Pezzini(Heidelberg University), Shérine Abboud(Heidelberg University), Anna Bersano(Heidelberg University), Ralf Dittrich(Heidelberg University), Caspar Grond‐Ginsbach(Heidelberg University), Ingrid Haußer(Heidelberg University), Manja Kloß(Heidelberg University), Armin Grau(Heidelberg University), Turgut Tatlisumak(Heidelberg University), Didier Leys(Heidelberg University), Philippe Lyrer(Heidelberg University)
Stroke
July 27, 2007
Cited by 253Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: The widespread preference of anticoagulants over antiplatelets in patients with cervical artery dissection (CAD) is empirical rather than evidence-based. Summary of Review- This article summarizes pathophysiological considerations, clinical experiences, and the findings of a systematic metaanalysis about antithrombotic agents in CAD patients. As a result, there are several putative arguments in favor as well as against immediate anticoagulation in CAD patients. CONCLUSIONS: A randomized controlled trial comparing antiplatelets with anticoagulation is needed and ethically justified. However, attributable to the large sample size which is required to gather meaningful results, such a trial represents a huge venture. This comprehensive overview may be helpful for the design and the promotion of such a trial. In addition, it could be used to encourage both participation of centers and randomization of CAD patients. Alternatively, antithrombotic treatment decisions can be customized based on clinical and paraclinical characteristics of individual CAD patients. Stroke severity with National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale score > or =15, accompanying intracranial dissection, local compression syndromes without ischemic events, or concomitant diseases with increased bleeding risk are features in which antiplatelets seem preferable. In turn, in CAD patients with (pseudo)occlusion of the dissected artery, high intensity transient signals in transcranial ultrasound studies despite (dual) antiplatelets, multiple ischemic events in the same circulation, or with free-floating thrombus immediate anticoagulation is favored.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis