Intensive Ambulance-Delivered Blood-Pressure Reduction in Hyperacute Stroke
Abstract
Treatment of acute stroke, before a distinction can be made between ischemic and hemorrhagic types, is challenging. Whether very early blood-pressure control in the ambulance improves outcomes among patients with undifferentiated acute stroke is uncertain.
We randomly assigned patients with suspected acute stroke that caused a motor deficit and with elevated systolic blood pressure (≥150 mm Hg), who were assessed in the ambulance within 2 hours after the onset of symptoms, to receive immediate treatment to lower the systolic blood pressure (target range, 130 to 140 mm Hg) (intervention group) or usual blood-pressure management (usual-care group). The primary efficacy outcome was functional status as assessed by the score on the modified Rankin scale (range, 0 [no symptoms] to 6 [death]) at 90 days after randomization. The primary safety outcome was any serious adverse event.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 55.41
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 36
Authors
60Topics & keywords
- Medicine
- Interquartile range
- Blood pressure
- Stroke (engine)
- Randomization
- Modified Rankin Scale
- Adverse effect
- Randomized controlled trial
- Good health and well-being
Funding
- TPTakeda Pharmaceutical Company
- SSShanghai Science and Technology Development Foundation
- CMChengdu Medical CollegeAward: CYFY-GQ10
- NNNational Natural Science Foundation of ChinaAward: 82171295
- TUTongji UniversityAward: 201702
- SHShanghai Hospital Development CenterAward: DLC2022003
- CSChengdu Science and Technology BureauAward: 2020-GH02-00057-HZ
- SPShanghai Pudong New Area Health CommissionAwards: PWYgy2021-05, PWZxq2017-08
- GIGeorge Institute for Global Health
- SPSichuan Province Science and Technology Support ProgramAward: 2021YFS0376, 2023YFS0042
- NHNational Health and Medical Research CouncilAward: APP114998