Artículo
Early Blood Pressure Lowering Does Not Reduce Growth of Intraventricular Hemorrhage following Acute Intracerebral Hemorrhage: Results of the INTERACT Studies
Fecha
2016Registro en:
Cerebrovasc Dis Extra. 2016 Sep-Dec; 6(3): 71–75
Autor
Chan, Edward
Anderson, Craig
Wang, Xia
Arima, Hisatomi
Saxena, Anubhav
Moullaali, Tom
Delcourt, Candice
Wu, Guojun
Wang, Jinchao
Chen, Guofang
Lavados, Pablo
Stampf, Christian
Robinson, Thompson
Chalmers, John
Institución
Resumen
Background
Intraventricular hemorrhage (IVH) extension is common following acute intracerebral hemorrhage (ICH) and is associated with poor prognosis.
Aim
To determine whether intensive blood pressure (BP)-lowering therapy reduces IVH growth.
Methods
Pooled analyses of the Intensive Blood Pressure Reduction in Acute Cerebral Hemorrhage Trials (INTERACT1 and INTERACT2) computed tomography (CT) substudies; multicenter, open, controlled, randomized trials of patients with acute spontaneous ICH and elevated systolic BP, randomly assigned to intensive (<140 mm Hg) or guideline-based (<180 mm Hg) BP management. Participants had blinded central analyses of baseline and 24-hour CT. Association of BP lowering to IVH growth was assessed in analysis of covariance.
Results
There was no significant difference in adjusted mean IVH growth following intensive (n = 228) compared to guideline-recommended (n = 228) BP treatment (1.6 versus 2.2 ml, respectively; p = 0.56). Adjusted mean IVH growth was nonsignificantly greater in patients with a mean achieved systolic BP ≥160 mm Hg over 24 h (3.94 ml; p trend = 0.26).
Conclusions
Early intensive BP-lowering treatment had no clear effect on IVH in acute ICH.