Neurocritical Care
Anticoagulant
Reversal Agent and Dose
Adverse Effects
Warfarin
4F-PCC [INR < 4 (25 units/kg, max 2500 units), INR
4โ6 (35 units/kg, max 3500 units), INR > 6 (50
units/kg, max 5000 units)] + vitamin K 10 mg IV
Alternative: FFP 10โ15 mL/kg + vitamin K 10 mg IV
Thrombosis, anaphylactoid reaction,
(vitamin K), pulmonary edema, or
transfusion-related reaction (FFP),
contains heparin (4F-PCC)
PO factor Xa
inhibitors
(rivaroxaban,
apixaban)
Andexanet alfa (Andexxa) (see dosing information
that follows in Table 12)
or 4F-PCC 25โ50 units/kg
or activated 4F-PCC (FEIBA) 25โ50 units/kg
Andexanet
Thrombosis; limited data for reversal,
especially with FEIBA
PO DTIsa
(dabigatran)
Idarucizumab (Praxbind) 5 g IV ร 1; repeat dose may
be necessary in patients with high DTI exposure or
poor renal function
Thrombosis; limited data analyses
show minimal efficacy for reversal
with PCC and FEIBA
PO antiplatelets
Platelet transfusion infusion (usefulness is uncertain
โ see Neurocrit Care 2016;24:6-45)
Consider desmopressin 0.4 mcg/kg IV
Pulmonary edema or transfusion-
related reaction
Unfractionated
heparin
Protamine 1 mg (max 50 mg) for each 100 units of
heparin (infused within the past 2โ3 hr)
Hypotension, hypersensitivity
Low-molecular-
weight heparins
Protamine 1 mg (max 50 mg) for each 1 mg of enoxa-
parin (within 8 hr of last dose)
Hypotension, hypersensitivity
aReversal options have not been tested in patients with ICH and have had varying degrees of coagulopathy reversal in experimental animal and human models.
DTI = direct thrombin inhibitor; FEIBA = factor eight inhibitor bypassing activity; FFP = fresh frozen plasma; 4F-PCC = 4-factor prothrombin complex concentrate.
Factor Xa Inhibitor
Last Dose
< 8 hr or Unknown Since Last Dose
โฅ 8 hr Since Last Dose
Apixaban
โค 5 mg
> 5 mg or unknown
Low dose
High dose
Low dose
Rivaroxaban
โค 10 mg
> 10 mg or unknown
Low dose
High dose
Low dose = 400 mg at a target rate of 30 mg/min, then 4 mg/min for up to 120 min; high dose = 800 mg at a target rate of 30 mg/min, then 8 mg/min for up to 120 min.
Blood Pressure Management
Prompt control of blood pressure is essential.
Historically, caution may have been used in rapidly reducing blood pressure in patients with chronic
hypertension because of concerns regarding accommodations in cerebral autoregulation.
However, there may be some benefit of rapidly reducing the blood pressure to approximately 140-
150 mm Hg (and thus reducing the risk of hemorrhage expansion). This may outweigh concern for
cerebral autoregulation issues and potential for ischemia, but patients with initial SBP >180 mm Hg
may have a greater risk of renal dysfunction.
| d. | INTERACT-2 โ Large, prospective, randomized trial that compared blood pressure control within 1 |
|---|
hour (N Engl J Med 2013;368:2355-65). SBP less than 140 mm Hg was as safe and effective as SBP
less than 180 mm Hg (and may have improved functional outcomes).
ATACH-2 โ Large, prospective, randomized trial comparing blood pressure control within 4ยฝ
hours in patients with SBP >180 mm Hg. Targeting an SBP goal of 110โ139 mm Hg was as effective
as targeting an SBP goal of 140โ179 mm Hg but was associated with increased renal adverse events
at 3 months. (Mean minimum SBP in the first 2 hours after randomization was 128.9 mm Hg in
the intensive-treatment group and 141.1 mm Hg in the standard-treatment group.) (N Engl J Med
2016;375:1033-43).