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DOI: 10.1038/s41598-024-56807-7
¤ OpenAccess: Gold
This work has “Gold” OA status. This means it is published in an Open Access journal that is indexed by the DOAJ.

Immediate angiographic control after intra-arterial nimodipine administration underestimates the vasodilatory effect

Charlotte Zaeske,David Zopfs,Kai Roman Laukamp,Simon Lennartz,Jonathan Kottlors,Lukas Goertz,Henning Stetefeld,Marion Hof,N Abdullayev,Christoph Kabbasch,Marc Schlamann,Michael Schönfeld

Nimodipine
Medicine
Vasospasm
2024
Intra-arterial nimodipine administration is a widely used rescue therapy for cerebral vasospasm. Although it is known that its effect sets in with delay, there is little evidence in current literature. Our aim was to prove that the maximal vasodilatory effect is underestimated in direct angiographic controls. We reviewed all cases of intra-arterial nimodipine treatment for subarachnoid hemorrhage-related cerebral vasospasm between January 2021 and December 2022. Inclusion criteria were availability of digital subtraction angiography runs before and after nimodipine administration and a delayed run for the most affected vessel at the end of the procedure to decide on further escalation of therapy. We evaluated nimodipine dose, timing of administration and vessel diameters. Delayed runs were performed in 32 cases (19 patients) with a mean delay of 37.6 (± 16.6) min after nimodipine administration and a mean total nimodipine dose of 4.7 (± 1.2) mg. Vessel dilation was more pronounced in delayed vs. immediate controls, with greater changes in spastic vessel segments (n = 31: 113.5 (± 78.5%) vs. 32.2% (± 27.9%), p < 0.0001) vs. non-spastic vessel segments (n = 32: 23.1% (± 13.5%) vs. 13.3% (± 10.7%), p < 0.0001). In conclusion intra-arterially administered nimodipine seems to exert a delayed vasodilatory effect, which should be considered before escalation of therapy.
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    Immediate angiographic control after intra-arterial nimodipine administration underestimates the vasodilatory effect” is a paper by Charlotte Zaeske David Zopfs Kai Roman Laukamp Simon Lennartz Jonathan Kottlors Lukas Goertz Henning Stetefeld Marion Hof N Abdullayev Christoph Kabbasch Marc Schlamann Michael Schönfeld published in 2024. It has an Open Access status of “gold”. You can read and download a PDF Full Text of this paper here.