Hemicraniectomy in Older Patients with Extensive Middle-Cerebral-Artery Stroke
Universität Ulm · University and Rehabilitation Clinics Ulm · +3 more institutions
Abstract
Early decompressive hemicraniectomy reduces mortality without increasing the risk of very severe disability among patients 60 years of age or younger with complete or subtotal space-occupying middle-cerebral-artery infarction. Its benefit in older patients is uncertain.
We randomly assigned 112 patients 61 years of age or older (median, 70 years; range, 61 to 82) with malignant middle-cerebral-artery infarction to either conservative treatment in the intensive care unit (the control group) or hemicraniectomy (the hemicraniectomy group); assignments were made within 48 hours after the onset of symptoms. The primary end point was survival without severe disability (defined by a score of 0 to 4 on the modified Rankin scale, which ranges from 0 [no symptoms] to 6 [death]) 6 months after randomization.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 47.88
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 38
Authors
15Topics & keywords
- Middle cerebral artery
- Medicine
- Stroke (engine)
- Cerebral infarction
- Infarction
- Cardiology
- Surgery
- Myocardial infarction
- Good health and well-being