The Good, the Bad and the Ugly of the NIHSS: Time for a Change?

August 31, 2021
The NIHSS remains the fundamental assessment of stroke severity. However, some have called for modifying the NIHSS to better capture disability. Is it time to change the NIHSS?
0 Comments

What Else Beyond the NIHSS Should We Be Doing Clinically?

August 24, 2021
The NIHSS was a research tool meant to limit variability and provide uniform quantifiable assessments  of stroke severity.  As the de facto standard for stroke exams and scores, it has withstood the test of time.  However, there is more to the assessment of acute stroke severity and this podcast takes a deep dive into what else we need to be doing besides the NIHSS.
0 Comments

The Clock Is Dead - The Reign of Tissue Imaging

August 17, 2021
Mismatch is your friend if you want to treat acute stroke patients beyond 3 hrs. While the clock was once the king, tissue imaging may now define what brain is salvageable and what has been lost. Listen here and see if you agree that the clock is dead in stroke.
0 Comments

Defining the SOC - Is 4.5 Hrs the Real Answer?

August 10, 2021
The standard of care can feel elusive. Listen here as Dr. Knight shares his expertise regarding the definition of the SOC in extended window therapy for tPA. It's not a simple question and Dr. Knight is the one to answer it.
0 Comments

How Do I Identify Patients at Risk for a Secondary Event Following an Initial Acute Ischemic Stroke?

August 3, 2021
Identification of patients at high risk for secondary ischemic event, after initial event or post TIA...is minimal tissue damage really that big of a deal related to secondary stroke? Drs. Galen Henderson of Brigham and Women’s Hospital and Jordan Bonomo of the University of Cincinnati discuss key perspectives from a neurocritical, emergency medicine, and stroke perspective related to this important area of medicine.
0 Comments
RSS
123578910Last
Categories
More Entries

Mar 31

The Role of Real World Evidence in Driving Clinical Care for Anticoagulated Patients with Life-Threatening Bleeding

Haemin Go posted on 3/31/2023


Moderator: W. Brian Gibler, MD, FACEP, FACC, FAHA
Other Participants: Paul P. Dobesh, PharmD, FACC, FAHA, FCCP, BCPS, BCCP; Gregory J. Fermann, MD; Natalie Kreitzer, MD, MS

In this podcast, experts in Emergency Medicine, Pharmacy, and Neurocritical Care describe important real world data which emphasize the use of specific reversal therapy for patients with life-threatening bleeding in the anticoagulated patient. These large retrospective trials describe patient care in multiple hospitals with large numbers of patients. For patients with Factor Xa-associated bleeding, real world evidence indicates that specific reversal using andexanet alfa is superior to nonspecific repletion therapy. Decreased mortality is associated with this specific reversal therapy. The clinician needs to use both clinical trial data and real world data to provide optimal patient care for the anticoagulated patient with life-threatening bleeding.


1 Comments

1 comments on article "The Role of Real World Evidence in Driving Clinical Care for Anticoagulated Patients with Life-Threatening Bleeding"

Avatar image

Benjamin Befeler

There is No info on CMEs

Please login or register to post comments.