Neurocritical Care
ii.
Endothelin activation
iii.
Liberation of hemoglobin results in the scavenging of nitric oxide.
| d. | Vasospasm is one of the main factors resulting in death or disability after an acute SAH, aside from |
|---|
initial ictus.
Surgical management to prevent rebleeding and βsecureβ aneurysm
Craniotomy and aneurysm clipping
Endovascular aneurysm coiling
Nimodipine (Br Med J 1989;298:636-42)
Is a βcerebrovascular-specificβ lipophilic dihydropyridine calcium channel blocker
ii.
60 mg orally or by tube every 4 hours Γ 21 days (dose reduction 30 mg every 2 hours may be
considered if 60 mg dose intolerable): The clinical impact of dose reducing or discontinuing
nimodipine because of hypotension is not well understood but may be associated with
unfavorable outcomes (Neurocrit Care 2016;25:29-39).
iii.
Only U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) label-approved medication to reduce delayed
ischemic neurologic deficits associated with SAH
iv.
Clinical trials did not show a large effect of nimodipine on the occurrence of vasospasm (though
the incidence of delayed ischemic neurologic deficits were significantly less).
Possibly neuroprotective
vi.
Administration issues in patients who require enteral doses β Black box warning against
inadvertent intravenous administration if nursing staff extract nimodipine from the gel capsule
at the bedside.
vii.
Nursing should be prohibited from extracting the gel inside the nimodipine capsule for bedside
administration (may increase the risk of inadvertent intravenous administration, incomplete
extraction from the capsule) (Neurocrit Care 2015;22:89-92).
viii.
There is a commercially available liquid product that is for use in patients with swallowing
difficulty or feeding tubes. Pharmacy compounding of nimodipine syringes from liquid
capsules has been reported but further studies are warranted to determine the optimal enteral
Antifibrinolytic agents
Use of antifibrinolytic agents such as aminocaproic acid or tranexamic acid has been evaluated
after SAH.
ii.
Older data analyses before the advent of endovascular interventions suggested that rebleeding
is less common with these agents (primarily aminocaproic acid) but that stroke may be more
common.
iii.
More recent data analyses suggest that a short infusion (less than 72 hours) reduces rebleeding
but probably does not affect long-term outcomes.
| (a) | The 2023 American Heart Association SAH guidelines moderately support this strategy in |
|---|
early SAH management (Stroke 2023;54:314-70)
| (b) | For example, use of 1000 mg of tranexamic acid intravenously every 6 hours until the |
|---|
aneurysm is secured
Statins
Preservation of nitric oxide balance as heme is liberated during SAH hemolysis.
ii.
Phase II data with pravastatin and simvastatin
iii.
Neurol 2014;13:666-75).