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– The benefits of mechanical thrombectomy observed in the DAWN trial for patients with acute ischemic stroke and a mismatch between core imaging and clinical presentation out to 24 hours appear to apply regardless of whether their eligibility is determined by CT perfusion or diffusion-weighted magnetic resonance imaging, according to a subanalysis of the trial data.

SOURCE: Sila C et al. ISC 2018, abstract LB11.

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– The benefits of mechanical thrombectomy observed in the DAWN trial for patients with acute ischemic stroke and a mismatch between core imaging and clinical presentation out to 24 hours appear to apply regardless of whether their eligibility is determined by CT perfusion or diffusion-weighted magnetic resonance imaging, according to a subanalysis of the trial data.

SOURCE: Sila C et al. ISC 2018, abstract LB11.

 

– The benefits of mechanical thrombectomy observed in the DAWN trial for patients with acute ischemic stroke and a mismatch between core imaging and clinical presentation out to 24 hours appear to apply regardless of whether their eligibility is determined by CT perfusion or diffusion-weighted magnetic resonance imaging, according to a subanalysis of the trial data.

SOURCE: Sila C et al. ISC 2018, abstract LB11.

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REPORTING FROM ISC 2018

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Key clinical point: DW-MRI is the gold standard for imaging, but CTP is more widely available.

Major finding: Rates of neurologic deterioration in hospital, symptomatic intracranial hemorrhage, and death related to stroke were similar regardless of whether CT or MR imaging was used to assess patients’ infarcts.

Data source: A subanalysis of the DAWN randomized, controlled trial (n = 206).

Disclosures: The DAWN study was funded by Stryker Neurovascular. Dr. Sila reported receiving honoraria from Medtronic.

Source: Sila C et al. ISC 2018, abstract LB11.

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