Diagnosis of reversible versus irreversible cerebral ischemia by the intravenous administration of naloxone.
- 1 November 1985
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Stroke
- Vol. 16 (6) , 1006-1009
- https://doi.org/10.1161/01.str.16.6.1006
Abstract
Naloxone was given as an I.V. bolus of 0.8 mgs to four groups of patients with stroke: 1) 20 patients with C.T. proven cerebral infarcts of longer than 7 days duration; 2) 20 patients with acute cerebral ischemia of less than 24 hours; 3) 5 patients with C.T. proven intracerebral hemorrhage of less than 24 hours, and; 4) 3 patients with hyperacute cerebral ischemia which occurred during the performance of a cerebral angiogram. The patients with established cerebral infarctions of more than 7 days duration and the patients with intracerebral hematomas had no response to intravenous naloxone. Of 20 patients with acute cerebral ischemia of less than 24 hours duration, 7 had prompt, complete and long-lasting recovery. These patients had no subsequent evidence of cerebral infarct by C.T. scanner 48 hours after the onset of the cerebral ischemia and were asymptomatic when discharged. The 3 patients with hyperacute cerebral ischemia secondary to cerebral angiography had a dramatic response to the injection of naloxone. These findings suggest that intravenous naloxone may differentiate reversible versus irreversible cerebral ischemia.This publication has 6 references indexed in Scilit:
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